*Repost* HCST Lecture with Chloe Ahmann
Time Bomb: 200 Years of Toxic Disavowal in South Baltimore
Location
Interdisciplinary Life Sciences Building (ILSB) : 233
Date & Time
April 22, 2024, 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Description
Time Bomb: Two Hundred Years of Toxic Disavowal in Late Industrial South Baltimore
Chloe Ahmann, Assistant Professor, Anthropology, Cornell University
In
December 2021, South Baltimoreans watched as a devastating blast at the
CSX coal terminal broke windows and sent a thick layer of carcinogenic
coal dust into the air, which coated every surface in a 12-block radius.
Deliberations at the city, state, and corporate level since have
concerned how to prevent the next catastrophe.
Palatable interventions range from promoting better coordination
between industry and first responders in the event of trouble, to
improving neighborhood alerts, to facilitating mass displacement.
Decidedly off the table have been meaningful responses to the everyday
disasters that have cut lives short on this industrial peninsula for the
past two centuries.
South
Baltimore has seen such a drama unfold before—most spectacularly during
the late Cold War, when industrial accidents were on the rise and
residents made sick over years of toxic exposure were moved to organize
for recompense. Rather than politicize their health to do so, they
learned to dramatize their imminent demise in the event of the next
emergency. In the sense that they eventually secured a buyout of their
homes, this argument was a success. But it hinged on an agreement to
limit charges to the hypothetical. It proceeded as if the gravest
obstacles to life lay then, in the devastating future, and not now,
ambient and tedious. Examining how residents came to strike this painful
bargain, the bleak conditions that made it seem like their best choice,
and the painful resonance of both in the wake of the CSX explosion, Ahmann considers what it means to privilege an analysis that works over
an analysis that speaks to life as lived—especially when the former
holds that a hypothetical death carries more political value than a real
one.
Organized by the Human Context of Science and Technology Program
Co-sponsored by the Department of Philosophy; the Center for Social Science Scholarship; the Dresher Center for the Humanities; and the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Public Health