TY - JOUR
T1 - New problems for assemblage thinking
T2 - materiality, governance and cycling in Sydney, Australia
AU - Lea, Tess
AU - Buchanan, Ian
AU - Fuller, Glen
AU - Waitt, Gordon
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council under grant number DP190100185 and was conducted with ethics approval from the University of Wollongong and the University of Sydney (Approval No: 2019/548).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - This paper urges a return to the original formations of Deleuze and Guattari scholarship, to enable issues of sustainability, materiality, and governance to be productively thought together. Assemblage thinking is used to reconsider how roads, machines, bodies, policies, and concepts of sustainability come together in a working arrangement and what might enable rearrangements. This is no easy task, in part because over time assemblage thinking has taken some unhelpful detours, and because policy is too often treated as a thing apart from the worlds we are assembled within. We proceed by confronting two major figures, Manuel DeLanda and Jane Bennett, to clear space for a repositioned model of assemblage theory. Using the empirical context of cycling in Sydney, Australia, we then grapple with the relationality of sustainability, materiality, and governance.
AB - This paper urges a return to the original formations of Deleuze and Guattari scholarship, to enable issues of sustainability, materiality, and governance to be productively thought together. Assemblage thinking is used to reconsider how roads, machines, bodies, policies, and concepts of sustainability come together in a working arrangement and what might enable rearrangements. This is no easy task, in part because over time assemblage thinking has taken some unhelpful detours, and because policy is too often treated as a thing apart from the worlds we are assembled within. We proceed by confronting two major figures, Manuel DeLanda and Jane Bennett, to clear space for a repositioned model of assemblage theory. Using the empirical context of cycling in Sydney, Australia, we then grapple with the relationality of sustainability, materiality, and governance.
KW - Assemblage thinking
KW - Deleuze
KW - embodied materiality
KW - governance
KW - tensors
KW - urban policy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126873551&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/1523908X.2022.2052271
DO - 10.1080/1523908X.2022.2052271
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85126873551
SN - 1523-908X
VL - 24
SP - 343
EP - 354
JO - Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
JF - Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
IS - 3
ER -