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Affective infrastructure: hospital landscapes of hope and failure
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 16:40 authored by Alice StreetHospitals are designed as spaces of improvement. Yet an accumulation of infrastructural projects can lead over time to the emergence of a layered landscape made up of multiple incongruous planned spaces. This article focuses on Madang General Hospital in Papua New Guinea as one example of such a landscape. Here, deteriorating colonial buildings jostle against new gleaming constructions built with donor funds. The layered effect of the postcolonial landscape draws attention to enduring racial and class inequalities; the colonial past is rendered present in the buildings of the future. Drawing on recent work on affect in anthropology and cultural geography I argue that this landscape impresses affects of hope and disappointment on the people who inhabit it and shapes ambivalent attachments to national and state futures. This double movement of improvement and decay is analysed as a process of ruination that is intrinsic to modern spaces of improvement
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Space and CultureISSN
1206-3312Publisher
SAGE PublicationsExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
15Page range
44-56Department affiliated with
- Anthropology Publications
Notes
In Special Issue: Hospital Heterotopias: Ethnographies of Biomedical and Non-Biomedical Spaces, edited by Alice Street and Simon ColemanFull text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes