Respectful disposal: Industrial incineration as a final disposition method

Research output: Other contribution

Abstract

Given the regulatory loopholes and restraints associated with cremation and human tissue handling in the United Kingdom, the anatomical specimens imported from the United States for research, testing and surgical training, once unusable, end up being destroyed at facilities designated for burning miscellaneous waste. A drawing-based ethnography of these disposal practices reveals respect towards the dead body to be a set of business-to-business services, contingent upon situational constellations of industrial spaces, machinery and human labour. Focus group workshops with these incinerators’ workers, reflecting on the under-regulated disposal procedures, indicate a conflict between the intentions behind efficient waste destruction and those behind respectful mortuary rites.
Sandwiched between the diverging interests of sanitary and moral cleansing, the waste workers self-alienate from the anatomical specimens they are incinerating, making the latter alienated from their former human selves. Applying Giorgio Agamben’s perspective on law incarnating the body, the research evidences a process of post-mortem stripping of the human body from its civic status. Using John Troyer’s angle on necro- and thanato-politics, I evaluate the injustices created through the corpse’s transatlantic commodity geography. Based on this, I argue for the importance of industrial machinery and labour for the overall operation of scientifically and financially benefitting or suffering from commodified bodies. Using a novel drawing-based method for studying the relationship of industrial work and human remains, the study takes a new angle on studying body remains rendered waste, contributing to the perspectives on the infrastructural commodification of the corpse, applicable in radical geography, medical humanities and science and technology studies.
Original languageEnglish
TypeAcademic talk given as an invited speaker
Media of outputVideo
PublisherVirginia Tech STS Department
Publication statusPublished - 5 Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Virginia Tech
  • Death
  • Respect
  • body donations

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Respectful disposal: Industrial incineration as a final disposition method'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this