Airports, affect and Arctic Futures: More-than-human thinking of connectivity and dwelling

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Like roads and harbours, airports are often addressed ontologically and analytically as a surface or functional backdrop for the development of places. In Greenland, two new international airports are set to open in 2024 thus unsettling the continuous running of the current transatlantic airport of Kangerlussuaq. While political and business discourse proclaim this massive infrastructure investment a ‘game changer’ for Greenland, much hope and many fears are vested in the project. Experimenting with personal memories and ethnographic field material, this essay attempts to stitch together ways of thinking about emergent and withering airport materialities. Far from seeing ‘the airport’ as a mere outcome of rational (or in the eyes of opponents, irrational) planning activities, we explore the imagining, prospecting, maintaining and coming-undone of airports as connected to ‘passion-enacting’ practices that generate – or cut – territorial attachments.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Routledge International Handbook of More-than-Human Studies
EditorsAdrian Franklin
Number of pages14
PublisherRoutledge
Publication date24 Nov 2023
Pages205-218
Chapter11
ISBN (Print)9781032191676, 9781032201788
ISBN (Electronic)9781003262619
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Nov 2023
SeriesRoutledge International Handbooks

Keywords

  • More-than-human
  • Airports
  • Greenland
  • Affect
  • Arctic futures
  • Connectivity

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