Dietrologia
One core stimulus for me here, a conceptual & compositional model/challenge, is Don DeLillo’s novel
Underworld (1998). Like so much of DeLillo’s work,
Underworld questions the legitimacy of multinational capitalism, its manipulation of images through saturation media/advertising to construct identity through acts of consumption, and its managing of ideological ‘waste’. (At one point, he co-opts Dupont’s slogan as an ironic chapter title: ‘Better Things for Better Living, Through Chemistry’). DeLillo proposes a sort of strategic paranoia about America’s military-industrial complex: agent orange/orange juice – ‘everything is connected’ (one of many links with Pynchon).
‘Dietrologia’ (280), the science of what ‘lies behind’ (events): a word familiar to organized crime investigators in Italy.
Here as elsewhere in DeLillo, there is an undercurrent – an ‘atavistic dread’ – related to the apocalyptic ecological threat of capitalism, and the media’s normalizing and rendering invisible of this threat. In a novel he says he conceived of in terms of ‘disappearance, loss, betrayal’, DeLillo presents a kind of counter-history of Cold War America in the shadow of the threat of auto-annihilation: a subterranean ‘underhistory of the Cold War, a curious history of waste which forms an underground stream in this book, waste and weapons’.
DeLillo describes literal ‘wastelands’ – massive landfills (in particular Fresh Kills on Staten Island, New York), reflecting the volume of waste generated in consumer culture, and capitalism’s postmodern solution to the problem of waste: ‘Don’t contain the growth of waste’ [which is an index of business being good]; ‘contain the appearance of waste’. In the novel, Nick Shay is involved in waste management; indeed he’s a ‘cosmologist of waste’ (88), who comes across scenes that are ‘medieval-modern, a city of high-rise garbage, the hell reek of every perishable ever thrown together’ (104). Remove all visible traces, dis/appear it ‘underground’: and yet Shay recognises waste as part of culture’s ‘secret history’ (791). At one point, he thinks: ‘Waste is an interesting word that you can trace through Old English and old Norse back to the Latin, finding such derivatives as
empty, void, vanish, and devastate’ (120).
One of DeLillo’s triggers for the title relates to his reading about proposals for plutonium and other nuclear waste to be buried in the desert in the South-West of the USA at Yucca Mountain and elsewhere. He uncovers the etymological link to Pluto, ‘god of the dead, ruler of the underworld’: they ‘took him out to the marshes and wasted him’ (106).
The novel explores affiliations with a criminal underworld - and an-other ‘underworld’, an underclass of homeless people in New York (capitalism’s others, human ‘waste’). Many of them in this novel are based in the subway (‘underground’): the ‘wastelings of the lost world, the lost country that exists right here in America’ (628). There are intertextual echoes here of the ‘valley of ashes’ in F Scott Fitzgerald’s
The Great Gatsby, and Pynchon’s
The Crying of Lot 49, even of Dickens’ Thames-side ash-and-waste entrepreneurs in
Our Mutual Friend.
DeLillo’s novel references apocalyptic representations in art of the underworld, notably Breughel’s
Triumph of Death: a ‘landscape of visionary havoc and ruin’, against a ‘background of ash skies and burning ships’ (41). And scattered through the novel are instances of waste being used in radical ‘underground’ or outsider art practices – including, for example, guerrilla artists who try to steal J Edgar Hoover’s garbage and use it to make performance art: a narrative based on AJ Weberman’s notorious pursuit of Bob Dylan through his trash in the 1960s. Historically, Hoover himself had authorised ‘dumpster diving’ as a legitimate means for the FBI to gather evidence …
In addition, DeLillo invents a series of Lenny Bruce gigs, improvised jazz-like hipster riffs around the time of the Cuban missile crisis, his uncanny channeling of the voices of the powerful and the ‘wastelings’, with the reiterated catch-phrase: ‘We’re all gonna die!’ Bruce’s voice is described as ‘the id-like wail from the audience’s own souls, the desperate buried place where you demand recognition of primitive rights and needs’ (547).
DeLillo also invents a supposedly ‘lost’ Eisenstein silent film called
Unterwelt, about the dispossessed ‘living in the shadows’. In the novel it’s viewed between two other films: Robert Frank’s documentary about the Rolling Stones on tour in America,
Cocksucker Blues; and an art installation video loop of multiple copies of the Zapruder film, the assassination of JFK. Associatively, all three films are about waste.
So, DeLillo constructs a kind of archaeological counter-narrative about proliferation and its waste (in both the arms race and consumerism). He traces ‘underground’ logics of another kind of ‘history’, ‘the sand-grain manyness of things that can’t be counted’ (60), and its desire ‘to find an element of felt life’ (77). In other words, History’s ‘waste’ – what it ejects, forgets, overlooks, represses (things, people, values and so on). The novel proposes a kind of scavenging resistance, an exercise in waste management, recycling or retrieval from the dust, the trash heap of history (alluding to Marx, Benjamin etc.). En route, DeLillo employs a range of compound words, some of them neologisms: ‘underbreath’, ‘undervoice’, ‘underdream’, underbelly, ‘underreal’, ‘underhistory’. A recurrent term is ‘understand’ -
dietrologia, the science of what lies behind; or Plato’s
hyponoia, Hillman’s ’undersense’. Under-stand. Stand-under ...
*****
Sea dreams: ‘blink’In another dream, the Sea has vanished suddenly - and completely - and its exposed bed is dotted with people out walking, inspecting what it has left behind. Out there, where the Sea once was, all sorts of people, bent over inspecting a patch of ground, or a piece of driftwood the size of a small tree. Or a bloated purple jelly-fish, scratching at the sand around it with their feet. I can see laughing kids with buckets and spades making castles and cities, and dads sculpting mermaids with shells in their hair, and writing messages in huge letters for the sky. Huddled figures have gathered beside a pool and they stare into it in silence, as though it is infinitely deep, or the plug-hole through which the Sea has departed. As far as the eye can see, thousands of shiny fish pulse on the sand, clasping and unclasping like fingerless silver hands.
Perched on some rocks is a wreck of a wooden schooner encrusted with barnacles, its cabin draped in fine weed, like Christmas decorations; its tattered sails slap and dance in the breeze. Closer to the shore a blue yacht lies on its side, its mast pointing to the sky at an angle of, say, ten o’clock; it looks like a weird oversized sun-dial. Elsewhere there is a beached whale and its cub, breathing heavily, with a man posing for a photo next to the mother’s soft eye: as the shutter closes, the whale blinks. The air is full of birds …
I stand transfixed on the shore watching all of this activity, too frightened to walk out on to the sea bed and join the other people. For I’m terrified of the possibility of the Sea’s sudden return … Perhaps that low smudgy strip of grey cloud on the horizon is in fact a thundering wall of water hundreds of feet high …
Nobody seems to notice except me, they just carry on regardless. I stand there, trembling like a hobbled racehorse.
*****
Fresh KillsFor more than 30 years, Mierle Laderman Ukeles has been artist-in-residence with the New York City Department of Sanitation, initially unsalaried, self-appointed. Many of her large-scale public projects focus on issues and processes related to waste management, and combine the social-civic-participatory, the environmental, and the political. In
Touch Sanitation (1978-84), she documented her meetings and conversations with NY’s sanitation workers, over an 11-month period thanking and shaking hands with over 8,500 ‘garbage’ workers in all 59 municipal districts in the five boroughs of New York. In response to their social marginalization, she was endeavouring to re-value the role of sanitation workers in the accumulation of small respect-ful human encounters: empathetic recognition of ‘the domestic on an urban scale’, and the value of human relations.
Flow City (1983-90) revealed to visitors the scale and material reality of solid waste management in NY City. It included access to the vast marine transfer station in Manhattan on the Hudson River, where the city’s waste is loaded from trucks onto barges for transportation by river to the landfill site. The project involved collaboration with artists, architects, scientists, ecologists; it entailed the construction of viewing platforms, a glass bridge/walkway, and video monitors with live-feed relay of the flows of river, landfill, recycling. The work made these ‘invisible’ processes available and immediate, and invited reflection on our imbrication within these relational circuits and their fragile ecologies.
Since 1989, Ukeles has also been working directly around the Fresh Kills landfill site on the Western shore of the borough of Staten Island. This is the biggest landfill site in the world where, for about 50 years until its closure in March 2001, 25,000 tons of waste from NY City were delivered daily. It was eventually closed because of its size – it had become one of the highest objects on the Eastern seaboard of the US, and threatened to impede air traffic. 2,200 acres, about 3.4 square miles, the equivalent of 2.5 Central Parks.
(Currently, and in the coming years, this vast brown fill site is being transformed into ‘Fresh Kills Park’, a huge public park space: the garbage has been capped, covered in a layer of earth and an impermeable plastic membrane, then topped with clean soil - up to 4 feet deep, native plants, its methane tapped and processed).
On 13th September 2001, one part of Fresh Kills, the largest (Western section 1/9), was re-opened as an emergency site for the FBI and NYPD to sift, sort and dump World Trade Centre debris from the terrorist attacks on September 11th. Dormant marine transfer stations and barges were re-mobilised within days. In an article for
Cabinet magazine in 2002, Ukeles asked: ‘What is the meaning of this place now?’ She refers to Fresh Kills as a collectively constructed urban earthwork, ‘a 50-year old social sculpture we have all produced, of four mountains made from 150 million cubic yards of the un-differentiated, un-named, no-value
garbage, whose every iota of material identity has been banished’ (Ukeles 2002). However with this dispersal of the ‘flying dust’ from ‘thousands of unfound, incinerated human beings’, and the mingling of human remains and garbage, she suggests: a ‘memorial, or graveyard – or whatever it is – needs to be created out of an utterly opposite kind of social contract. The shattered taboo that enabled this unholy shotgun marriage needs to be restored; a chasm-change in attitude is required, one of very deliberate differentiating, of naming, of attentive reverence for each mote of dust from each lost individual. Thus remembered. This must become a place that returns identity to, not strips identity from, each perished person …” (ibid).
*****
Elsew/here: ‘looking for our lives’Elsew/here, another kind of sea far inland. The travellers arrive in ones and twos, sometimes a small van arrives in a dust cloud and disgorges an unsteady gaggle of people, shrouded against the sun. They carry light bags for the journey, just the barest of essentials. They have long since said goodbye to their families. Those that stay behind never say their son or daughter or husband ‘left’ or ‘migrated’; they refer to them as ‘the burnt ones’, those that have burnt the law, the past.
At the meeting point in the dunes a man in sunglasses shows them the pre-fabricated kit from which they will build the boat. As he explains the process, he traces lines and swirls in the sand with a stick. Lengths of untreated pine are laid out on the ground; to one side on a white cloth, a variety of bolts, screws, two screwdrivers, a hammer, some bags of plastic ballast. The wood looks like the ruptured rib cage of some extinct beast, bleached by the sun, then buried by the tidal movements of the sand, and only now disinterred.
Many of them have never seen the sea; with diverse images of ‘boat’ in their minds, they start to assemble this mysterious thing in which they will entrust their hopes and their lives. Gradually separate pieces are linked together and the boat’s outline emerges. Their tap-tap-tapping is sometimes interrupted by the low throb of a military plane scouring the dunes; they hide under camouflaged tarpaulins, or lie flat on the sand to try to make themselves invisible, just more fragments of unremarkable desert flotsam.
When the boat is finished, they stand around it with a mixture of astonishment and trepidation. In silence they wait huddled against the cold night until dawn, unable to sleep, then at first light they drag the boat through the sand towards the sea. We go looking for our lives, they say.
On these journeys, there is time but not a thing by which to tell it, save the passage of the sun, the phases of the moon, and the patient pulse of the sea’s pull and give.
*****
Slow burial‘It is interesting, the debris in the air. A surprising portion of it is spider legs, and bits thereof. Spider legs are flimsy … because they are hollow. They lack muscles; compressed air moves them. Consequently, the snap off easily, and go blowing about. Another unexpected source of aerial detritus is tires. Eroding tires shed latex shreds at a brisk clip, say the folk who train their microscopes on air. Farm dust joins sulfuric acid droplets (from burned fossil fuels) and sand from the Sahara Desert to produce the summer haze that blurs and dims valleys and coasts.
We inhale “many hundreds of particles in each breath we take” … Air routinely carries intimate fragments of rug, dung, carcasses, leaves and leaf hairs, coral, coal, skin, sweat, soap, silt, pollen, algae, bacteria, spores, soot, ammonia, and spit, as well as “salt crystals from ocean white-caps, dust scraped off distant mountains, micro bits of cooled magma blown from volcanoes and charred micro-fragments from tropical forest fires”. These sorts of things can add up.
At dusk, the particles meet rising water vapor, stick together, and fall; that is when they will bury you. Soil bacteria eat what they can, and the rest of it stays put if there’s no wind. After thirty years, there is a new inch of topsoil’ (Dillard 1999: 123-4).
*****

To be continued ...
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WebsitesFor Legambiente, Italy, see
hereFor Legambiente’s illegal waste archive reports, see
hereA version of some of these 'Underhistory' texts, was first presented as ‘Underworld, underground, underhistory: ecomafia landscapes’, part of the 4-day AHRC-funded ‘Landscape and Environment’ conference at Aberystwyth University, Wales, in June 2009. (Coordinators: Mike Pearson and Heike Roms). For further details, see here