Everyone is talking about the big ship getting stuck in the #Suez Canal. Here's a critical logistics reading list on the politics of how we got here -why ships are so huge, why there is a manmade canal cutting through a continent, why global supply chains seem so brittle, & more.
On the rise of the logistics revolution that shaped the martial politics of global trade from the 1960s to present, read @debcowen's seminal The Deadly Life of Logistics upress.umn.edu/book-division/…
This talk I gave at @SonicActs, also the partial subject of of my book manuscript, thinks through the irrational rationalities of obsessions with monstrous ships in the logistics industry, and the corresponding effects on global infrastructure re-imagine-europe.eu/resources_item…
@LalehKhalili's wonderful Sinews of War and Trade is a tour de force history of the making or ports & shipping infrastructure in the Arabian Peninsula and beyond. Ch. 1, "route-making" has an important section on the Suez Canal versobooks.com/books/3172-sin…
On Barak's "Powering Empire" is a powerful (literally) account of how the age of empire was driven by coal-powered steamships, leading to the globalization of carbon energy today. ucpress.edu/book/978052031…
If you're worried about ships hijacked by pirates as they reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, Jatin Dua's "Captured by Sea" is essential reading; an account of the entanglements of insurance regimes and global capital with the history of Somali Piracy: ucpress.edu/book/978052030…
In a study of the Panama Canal, @martindanyluk interrogates the interspatial global competition premised on attracting cargo traffic to ports and canals, representing capital's tendency to produce "fungible space": ijurr.org/article/fungib…
@outsidadgitator's classic and crucial @Endnotes essay is a must-read on "counterlogistics" and the possibilities of repurposing global logistical circuits for the communist prospect; endnotes.org.uk/issues/3/en/ja…
...which should be followed by Alberto Toscano's excellent, comradely response: viewpointmag.com/2014/09/28/lin…
Years ago, I rode on an Evergreen container ship going from the Port of LA to KaoHsiung, Taiwan for 48 days. A series of five posts written onboard explores the everyday life of transoceanic shipping and its banal cruelties. (read from the bottom to top) thedisorderofthings.com/tag/slow-boat-…
Of course, Tim Mitchell's Carbon Democracy is not to be missed; an agenda-setting account of the global shift from coal to oil and the rise of fossil-fueled capitalism grounded in global shipping mobilities versobooks.com/books/1020-car…
Newly published, Alejandro Colas and @LiamCampling's masterful Capitalism and the Sea covers an incredible geography and history of the political economy, ecology, and geopolitics of the global ocean. versobooks.com/books/3647-cap…
Edited by @martindanyluk, @debcowen, @LalehKhalili, and myself, this special issue of @societyandspace charts an agenda for critical logistics research, with excellent pieces by wonderful contributors such as @RafeefZiadah and Wes Attewell journals.sagepub.com/toc/epd/36/4
Finally, for those in the US interested in the consequences and effects of global just-in-time shipping on inland warehousing logistics, Juan De Lara's "Inland Shift" is a wonderful account of the entwinements of race, space, labor and logistics: ucpress.edu/book/978052029…
And Phil Neel's "Hinterland" is a beautifully written account of the transformation of the geography of the US and China into a network of coastal hubs and logistical heartlands: akpress.org/hinterland.html
A lot of wonderful work was not covered here; for those who want to dive deeper into global logistics and the ocean, I recommend @ProfPeterCole's Dockworker Power; and the work of Katy Fox-Hoddess, Dave Featherstone, Elizabeth Sibilia, Phil Steinberg, & Hege Hoyer Leivestad.
@BLMcKean's new book, Disorienting Neoliberalism, is a crucial political theoretic account of how we might orient ourselves to global justice within an economy of global supply chains that threaten freedoms across a dizzying scale: oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/o…
Some recs got lost in replies because I don’t know how to Twitter, so: @BLMcKean's new book, Disorienting Neoliberalism, is a crucial political theoretic account of how to orient ourselves to global justice given the dizzying scale of global supply chains global.oup.com/academic/produ…
And Martin Arboleda’s excellent book, Planetary Mine, links the politics of extractivism in Latin America to the transpacific growth of logistics, versobooks.com/books/3078-pla…

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More from @CharmaineSChua

12 Aug 20
Dean Spade on mutual aid: "In the context of contemporary culture, certain social movement activities align with imperatives of external validation & elitism. Reproductive labor, such as cooking; cleaning; maintaining 1-on-1 relationships...is devalued & mostly uncompensated." 1/
"Social movements reproduce these hierarchies, valuing people who give speeches, get published, and become visible as actors in ways that align w dominant hierarchies. It is glamorous to take a selfie with Angela Davis, but it is not glamorous to do weekly prison visits." 2/
"Such representations hide the realities of mass participation that does not produce careers or notoriety for most participants. For these reasons, mutual aid work is one of the least visible & most important forms of work tt social movements need to be developing right now." 3/
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