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The Social Properties of Concrete

  • Edited by Eli Elinoff, Kali Rubaii

Published on May 9, 2025 by punctum books

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Pages
478 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-248-8 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-68571-249-5 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2025931525
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: ARC009000, SOC002010
Thema subject codes
THEMA: 1FKA, 1FMB, 1FML, 1FMT, AMCM, AMCM, JHMC, KNJC

Concrete is a ubiquitous part of our world. It composes our dwellings and shapes our infrastructures. It unites and divides urban space and is used to wage both war and peace. Concrete is simultaneously an indicator of freedom and development and is an essential part of the carceral apparatus. The Social Properties of Concrete begins from the premise that concrete is as richly social as it is densely material. Just as concrete’s materiality permeates our everyday life, our political projects, social practices, religious concepts, environmental transformations, and ethical questions suffuse concrete structures.

Like concrete itself,* The Social Properties of Concrete* is an aggregate: it draws together essays by social scientists, historians, architects, artists, and urban planners who each blend social theory, material science, and empirical analysis to explore the ways in which social life is embedded within concrete and to inquire about how concrete shapes social life. Across forty globally situated chapters, these essays open new conversations around our relationships with anthropogenic stone and serve as a teachable introduction to the social and political lives of materials. By taking this approach, this volume develops a conceptual language and methodological approach that should inform new understandings of material politics and our built environment.

The social properties of concrete are neither metaphors nor are they simple reflections of the social. Instead, they are modes of materially enacting social, economic, and political life itself.

Contents

  1. Frontmatter (1–14)

  2. Introduction: The Social Properties of Concrete (15–59)

    Eli Elinoff, Kali Rubaii

  3. Aggregate (61–76)

    Eli Elinoff

  4. Becoming (77–84)

    Penny Harvey, Constance Smith

  5. Belonging (85–93)

    Claudia Gastrow

  6. Churning (95–104)

    Malini Sur

  7. Connections (105–115)

    Austin Zeiderman

  8. Contracting (117–128)

    Pinai Sirikiatikul

  9. Corruption (129–141)

    Cassandra Hartblay

  10. Curing (143–154)

    Rachel Cypher

  11. Demolition (155–164)

    Tim Oakes

  12. Depth (165–172)

    Matt Edgeworth

  13. Edgework (173–181)

    Lukas Ley

  14. Entombment

    Greg Dvorak

  15. Erasure (195–203)

    Nasser Abourahme

  16. Exoskeleton (205–212)

    Denis Byrne

  17. Extraction (213–220)

    Vanessa Lamb

  18. Fear (221–228)

    Mona Chettri

  19. Foundation (229–240)

    Rebecca Bowers

  20. Grayscale (241–249)

    Erik Harms

  21. Impermeability (251–256)

    Rosalie Stolz

  22. Improvisation (257–266)

    Rowan McCormick

  23. Incompleteness (267–275)

    Siddharth Menon

  24. Kinship (277–283)

    Heid Jerstad

  25. Magic (285–293)

    Naomi Haynes

  26. Microbiome (295–303)

    Matthew Gandy

  27. Plasticity (305–314)

    Elihu Rubin

  28. Progress (315–322)

    Julie Soleil Archambault

  29. Progressivism (323–338)

    Gabriel Lee

  30. Resonance (339–344)

    Marina Peterson

  31. Risk (345–352)

    Tyson Vaughan

  32. Speculation (353–361)

    Tong Lam

  33. Scarcity (363–371)

    Emily Brownell

  34. Settler Colonialism (373–381)

    Lila Sharif

  35. Shredding (383–393)

    Duncan McDuie-Ra

  36. Stability (395–404)

    Diana Martinez

  37. Standardization (405–414)

    Christina Schwenkel

  38. Time (415–422)

    Cristián Simonetti

  39. Uncertainties (423–435)

    Jerome Whitington

  40. Uniformity (437–449)

    Mo H. Zareei

  41. Warscaping (451–461)

    Kali Rubaii

  42. Contributors (463–471)

Biographies

  • Eli Elinoff

    (Editor) (opens in new tab)

    Victoria University of Wellington

    Eli Elinoff is a Senior Lecturer of Cultural Anthropology at Victoria University of Wellington. His research explores the intersection between politics, urbanization, and environmental transformation in Southeast Asia. He is the author of Citizen Designs: City-Making and Democracy in Northeastern Thailand (Hawai‘i, 2021).

  • Kali Rubaii

    (Editor) (opens in new tab)

    Purdue University System

    Kali Rubaii is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Purdue University. Her research explores the environmental impacts of warfare in Iraq. Taking toxicity as an analytic for material politics, her current book project examines how farmers in Anbar, Iraq struggle to survive and recover from transnational counterinsurgency projects. Her next project explores how the concrete industry in post-invasion Iraq enforces global regimes of race, class, and environmental degradation.

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Genres

  • Anthropocene
  • Built Environments
  • Cultural Studies+Critical Theory

Keywords

  • architecture
  • built environments
  • cement
  • concrete
  • environmental change
  • infrastructure
  • militarism
  • new materialism
  • politics