Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/26307
Appears in Collections:Communications, Media and Culture Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: A Rubbish Idea: The material dump, and casting trash talk in a new light
Author(s): Fleming, David
Hernandez, Lili
Tillotson, Jonathan
Evers, Clifton
White, Andrew
Martin, Paul
Mooney, Michael
Willcocks, Kim
Issue Date: Jan-2013
Date Deposited: 7-Dec-2017
Citation: Fleming D, Hernandez L, Tillotson J, Evers C, White A, Martin P, Mooney M & Willcocks K (2013) A Rubbish Idea: The material dump, and casting trash talk in a new light. Trash Culture Journal, 1 (1), pp. 4-14. https://trashculturejournal.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/a-rubbish-idea.pdf
Abstract: Inspired by the trash-art creations of artists such as Tim Noble and Sue Webster, this creative article-assemblage was gathered together over several months by the UNNC Litter Lovers collective. The aleatoric article attempts to provocatively explore alternative ways of thinking about (or with) trash, modern life and recycling. The article is formed by found, chanced upon, and recycled fragments of used cultural material, at times united by original-organic discussions and catalytic ideas, but ultimately demands the intellectual light of the reader to cast the concepts into relief. The collective utilises form and content to generate new ways of seeing and thinking about waste and rubbish, and like the actual trash heaps and trash-art that inspired this work, they attempt to show how matter itself and (used) material is not inert and passive but rather vibrant, expressive and alive: boasting productive powers and forces capable of bringing about unforeseen reactions and new forms of synthesis. The article is designed to ignite new processes within, between, across and ‘below’ the chaotically assembled fragments. The piece is in part motivated by a drive to ethically recycle in an inspiring and creative way, and be part of new things emerging out of the old. This alternative intellectual happening is also in part designed to help people ‘clean’ their collective conscience and learn to 'love rubbish.' We hope that this is in part achieved by de-centering the human, and foregrounding a polysemous concept of the material dump that forces readers to reinterrogate everyday (non-thought) notions of waste, nature, (human) resources, thought and art.
URL: https://trashculturejournal.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/a-rubbish-idea.pdf
Rights: Publisher is open-access. Open access publishing allows free access to and distribution of published articles where the author retains copyright of their work by employing a Creative Commons attribution licence. Proper attribution of authorship and correct citation details should be given.
Notes: Additional co-author: the UNNC Litter Lovers (a creative academic collective)

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