Adriana Varella and Nilton Malz, Digital DNA, Palo Alto (California), 2005. 
Photo by Wonderlane, graphic elaboration

 

Nature does not generate waste: evolution has promoted such a circularity and an interdependence between different forms of life that the waste of a process – or of part of it – feeds further or parallel processes. Man’s departure from this trophic circularity has been neither sudden nor linear. 

For a long time, and undoubtedly in all preurban cultures, waste – or rather excrements and waste generated by the manipulation of everyday objects – did not pose a big problem. This was because its amount and, above all, the fact that it was made up of organic or inert material, determined a sort of ontological continuum between man and his environment: a close integration between cycles that promoted social expansion and those characterizing the natural world. The first break of this continuity was probably the burials that man used for his deceased, instead of giving the bodies back to the environment. 

The problem of taking away waste from everyday environment started with urbanization and only in so far as cities’ streets, irrigation ditches and gardens were not able to absorb naturally human activities’ waste. Something that preindustrial city dwellers probably understood too late. Nevertheless, the advent of industrial society marked a general metamorphosis of this problem.

a) First, it drastically increased the number of people generating waste. Population growth characterizing the modern world is a recent phenomenon. It began in the Western world thanks to the increased availability of food starting in the mid-18th century.

b) Secondly, it also increased the pro-capita waste generation. This is first taken from the environment and it is then given back as waste: the epoch-making transformation caused by the industrial revolution does not affect only resource extraction but also, more or less with the same intensity and with a time gap destined to shorten over time, the use of the environment to dump discarded materials and products.

c)Thirdly, it changed waste composition. For thousands of years man used, and thus discarded, organic materials that nature was perfectly able to re-introduce in its biological cycles; or inert materials that did not alter the balance neither before or after man’s use. But starting with the development on industrial scale of metallurgy first and of carbon chemistry and petrochemistry later and eventually of new synthetic and composite materials – the performance of these materials is mainly linked to the irreversibility of the processes through which they are produced – have caused a reduction of the organic fraction of the total amount of waste in favour of the non-biodegradable fraction.

d) Finally, goods are no longer totally used; capital goods, that is means of production, are characterized by an obsolescence period that does not coincide with their wear and tear cycle. But above all, consumer goods have undergone a radical transformation, increasingly pushing them towards the “disposable” realm. 

 

 

In order to accommodate all this waste we need space, but it must be “empty” space – land, water or air – where we can dump everything we do not want to see. The common thread of both responsible (through specific technologies) and irresponsible (that is simply “abandoning” waste, counting on natural processes such as rain, wind, currents and spontaneous biological processes to get rid of it) waste disposal is that the environment is seen and can be used as an empty space available to society for dumping what it deems no longer possible or useful to keep or use. 

This way of looking at the environment is as widespread, rooted and characteristic of the modern spirit as the notion that the world is a mine of resources available for the development of productive forces. This is why waste, before clogging and fouling the external world, polluted the mind as phenomenology of spirit. In addition, it has taken over because it equates to an approach to the world characterized by the development of technological domination in the modern world: this is exactly what has happened to the progressive transformation of nature into a mere reservoir of resources. 

The crucial conditions for this cultural mutation has been the construction of the cosmos, and in particular of the environment where we live, as a geometric space, defined by the three dimensions and by the calculations that can be done on them. This vision has taken hold though the triumphs of modern physics and its mechanistic paradigm, that is through the “transition from organism to machine as a dominant metaphor binding together the cosmos, society, and the ego in a sole cultural reality” (Merchant C., The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and The Scientific Revolution, San Francisco, Harper San Francisco, 1980). Empty geometric space governing the removal of waste – in whichever form or physical state it might be – is the same concept allowing us to consider whatever fills it just as a stockpile of materials available for new uses. In reality, resources and waste are strictly complementary: waste and its infinite growth potential is fed by the same infinite availability of natural resources. And vice versa: the transformation of nature in resources, that is the availability of all reality to be used in new ways, would never have reached such universal proportions in the modern world if it had not been guaranteed not only a privileged way in through goods in the realm of human activities but also a way out from this realm once they have lost their usefulness. As a proof, suffice it to look at the way the world of waste has progressively expanded to include anything not seen as a resource.

First, waste, which is somehow the excrements of society, has attracted in its orbit biological excrements and not vice versa. This first involved human dejecta, in the past used as fertilizer or collected in septic tanks where they were converted into humus and given back to the environment. However, with the introduction of sewage systems, and above all of flushing, they have been dumped into rivers and eventually seas, counting on their ability to contain them all. Nevertheless, the process of transforming excrements into waste has gone further, including most of animal dejecta that are dumped into rivers and are now amongst the factors contributing to eutrophication in many lakes and seas. In this change, a vision of the environment as a mere available empty space where what is no longer economically viable to treat or use can be dumped, has replaced the concept of excrements as an essential link in the interexchange between organisms and the environment.

Secondly, it has become natural that all goods produced are not made to last. We produce to replace: but the implicit assumption of such behaviour is that everything that is replaced can and must be thrown away. The throwaway society – the result of consumerism, that is a social organization perpetuated through the proliferation of goods, because without such increase the links (trade) binding it together would disappear and through the means with which it guarantees its members’ livelihood (occupation as a privileged access to income) – is based both on the assumption of infinite resource extraction and that of endless accumulation of waste. 

Finally, with the progressive extension of the resource realm from produce to the whole creation, including man who expected to dominate this process in the name of his right to use nature (this is why we refer to “human resources”), the realm of waste also progressively expanded, including not only what in the past was not waste because it belonged to the “natural” relations of exchange between man and his environment, but man himself, who invented the notion of waste. In different historical eras, the words “human waste” or “social waste” were used to isolate and remove from society and its processes all those individuals that the dominant culture no longer considered, or was no longer able to see, as resources, that is criminals, the handicapped, the antisocial, and the long-term unemployed. The history of this process is the other side of a general notion of social relations that selects and values individuals on the basis of their ability to produce and their contribution to production. In this case as well, we are faced with a unique process: to increase productivity, we have deeply tapped indiscriminately into human faculties, selecting and using them according to pre-established objectives – the very essence of exploitation – because there is the possibility, when they are no longer usable, of throwing them away, together with the individuals, the wretched vessels of such faculties. 

 

Publicity photo from Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid, about 1921

 

However, what has happened to waste since we developed technologies to treat it, to make it harmless, to recycle it and no longer leave it to itself as it happened for many years and it is still happening in many parts of the world? Those technologies, and the laws that supported their development and adoption, have transformed waste into the privileged recipient of a generalized “management.” The same detailed directions do not apply to what can be considered the forerunners of the realm of waste, that is goods and their production. This is even more so if we go back to the dawn of the reflection on the world of goods. It is the essential nature and destiny of goods, and not of waste, “to be left to their own devices,” that is to the free play of the forces of demand and supply and the process of circulation – both social and physical – triggered by it. Laissez-faire, laissez-passer are the mottos printed on the flags of market idolizers according to whom independence within civil society and legal regulations is achieved through the production of goods, in a period when the market is imposing itself as the privileged environment for social development. No one would ever dream, or has ever dreamt, to claim the same mottos for the production of waste, even if, in reality, this has been and still is a widespread practice. De facto and legal freedom enjoyed by the market and the circulation of goods in society, the autonomy of trading relationships, as a means of social cohesion no longer based on blood or community ties, do not tally exactly with the restrictions and the rules governing waste. It can no longer be “abandoned” without obstructing and making unusable both the physical and social space where the freedom of goods takes place.

Waste is the obscure side of goods. Legislators subject waste to ever more rigorous rules in an attempt to keep as unchanged as possible the freedom of those who legally enjoy goods. Or vice versa, goods produce an immense amount of waste on which legislators must intervene, because the law and above all the market ideology allow its production. Legislators intervene on waste, followed by hordes of experts, conventionees, authorized and illegal treatment plant builders and thousands of profiteers of what society is not able to recognize and accept as part of its functioning because it if forbidden or it believes it is forbidden to act on goods, their composition, their production processes and their use. However, waste is just the perceptible manifestation – to the eye, to the touch, to the nose and so on – of the freedom enjoyed by goods.