How "drowned town" literature, road movies, energy landscape
photography, and "death train" narratives represent the brutality
of industrial infrastructures.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: The Paver of Modern Life 1
1 Drowned Town Fiction: The Intimate Poetics of Large Dams and
Settler Common Sense 41
2 The Materiality of the Road in the “Road Movie” 117
3 Agency and Energy Regimes in Ruins: The Photography of Oil
Landscapes 149
4 Death Train Narratives 193
Conclusion: Infrastructural Brutalism and Brisantic Politics
227
Notes 267
Bibliography 327
Index 361
Michael Truscello is Associate Professor in the Departments of English and General Education at Mount Royal University, Calgary.
"From the sea of books that are published each year, every once in
a while something truly brilliant washes ashore and radically
changes the way we think about the world. Infrastructural Brutalism
is one of those books. Truscello has produced a visionary critique
of infrastructure, positioning it not as mere connection or
capillary, but as a noxious reflection of the cruelty of capitalism
and the dissonance, despair, and death that it delivers."
– Simon Springer, Professor of Human Geography, Univeresity of
Newcastle, Australia; author of The Anarchist Roots of Geography
and Violent Neoliberalism
"Capital wills itself to become infrastructure. Yet industrial
capitalism now strangles life to the extent that we become weedy
survivors in the cracks of its cementscape. Truscello’s fascinating
study probes the death drive of contemporary capital though its
necroaesthetics while summoning a politics that could rupture this
suicidal trajectory."
– Dominic Boyer, Professor, Rice University; author of
Energopolitics: Wind and Power in the Anthropocene
"Infrastructural Brutalism is a provocative and radical
contribution to contemporary infrastructure studies. Truscello’s
work here is erudite, inventive, and politically charged. My
scholar’s brain is buzzing, and my activist’s heart is
pumping."
– Darin Barney, Grierson Chair in Communication Studies, McGill
University; author of The Network Society
“There are only a handful of books in our preciously short lives
that force us to re-evaluate and reimagine the world around us in
fundamental ways and our role(s) within it. For me, Infrastructural
Brutalism will be one of those books, and I have every confidence
that such a transformative relationship will be shared by many
others.”
—Richard J. White, Reader in Human Geography, Sheffield Hallam
University
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