Article
Political Initiative

Repair Matters - ephemera: theory & politics in organization

Date: 07/10/2019
Author: Valeria Graziano, Kim Trogal
Contributor: eb™ Research Team

This special issue of ephemera aims to investigate contemporary practices of repair as an emergent focus of recent organizing at the intersection of politics, ecology and economy (e.g. Bialski et al., 2015; Perey and Benn, 2015; Wiens, 2013). We wish to explore notions of repair and maintenance as crucial components for redefining sociopolitical imaginaries (Castoriadis, 1987), away from the neoliberal capitalist dogma of throw-away culture and planned obsolescence. What we set out to do in these introductory pages is to convoke repair as a regime of practice. By this, we wish to gesture towards a Foucauldian analysis and definition of regimes of government as the specific compounds of the rationalities, technologies, programs, and so on that try to influence the conduct of the state its agencies and agents and to shape the conduct of individuals and populations within the state (Dean and Villadsen, 2016: 21). Repair is not outside of dominant governing regimes and practices, but shaped by them. At the same time, following Foucault, it cannot be defined and determined by extant governing rationalities there are always scopes for approaching, practicing and organizing repair differently. In putting together this special issue we were particularly interested in the latter and we focused our analysis on the potential of repair as a sources of counter-power and counter-conduct (Foucault, 2009: 195). We believe that by describing repair as a regime of practice we can highlight how it can be implicated in both rationalities, and thus, through the constellation of repair concepts, figures and gestures, this special issue aims to rethink the way we narrate our relationships with the human-made matters, tools and objects that are the material mesh in which organisational life takes place as a political question.