Past event
Productive Potentialities Within---and Beyond---Lithiumphilia Guest Lecture by Mark Goodale, University of Lausanne
Health guidelines for this event
- Face masks required
Join us for a lecture by Mark Goodale visiting from the University of Lausanne, where he is a Professor of Cultural and Social Anthropology.
This paper is structured by two parts. It begins by reflecting critically and more generally about the ways in which the anthropology of energy, climate change, and mobility must resist a tendency to conceive of research questions, frame research projects, and develop scholarly interventions that mirror the underlying urgencies that define energy and climate processes. As an illustration of this tendency, the paper describes a particular underlying urgency described as “lithiumphilia,” an obsession with lithium as both resource and panacea given that lithium forms the productive core of a set of interconnected technologies that include “battery grade” lithium carbonate, cathodic material, lithium-ion batteries, and electric vehicles (EVs).
The paper's second part describes what happens when lithiumphilia is resisted as an ethnographic imperative. Based on ongoing research conducted largely in Bolivia, which contains by far the world's largest known lithium reserves, the paper examines the ways in which the country's lithium industrialization project must be understood differently when viewed beyond the global allure of lithium extraction and its promise of a so-called green energy transition. Approached ethnographically beyond the epistemological tunnel vision of lithiumphilia, the actually existing productive relations around lithium in Bolivia look quite different. Instead of a centralizing project that properly reflects its wider value, the lithium industrialization process in Bolivia takes the shape of simply one among several “productive potentialities,” that is, micro political economies that are unfolding according to distinct—and incompatible—productive and ideological logics.
Mark Goodale holds a chair at the University of Lausanne, where he is Professor of Cultural and Social Anthropology and former Director of the Laboratory of Cultural and Social Anthropology (LACS). Before moving to Switzerland in 2014, he held teaching positions at George Mason University, where he was Professor of Conflict Analysis and Anthropology, and Emory University, where he served as the first Marjorie Shostak Distinguished Lecturer in Anthropology. He currently directs a four-year research project (2019-2023) on lithium industrialization, energy materialities, and green energy politics, with a focus on Bolivia, financed by the Swiss National Science Foundation.