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Hsuan L. Hsu

    Air Conditioning
    The Smell of Risk
    • The Smell of Risk

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      4.4(17)Add rating

      This exploration delves into how odor intertwines with structural inequality, emphasizing the visceral and personal nature of our sense of smell. Hsuan L. Hsu highlights the historical dismissal of smell in Western aesthetics due to its subjectivity and volatility. However, these qualities render olfaction a crucial tool for understanding environmental risk and inequality. Unlike other senses, smell transcends space and connects with our bodies. Hsu examines how writers, artists, and activists utilize the biochemical aspects of smell to critique the disparities of modernity. The narrative outlines how differentiated atmospheres contribute to the uneven distribution of environmental risk. By analyzing a range of works, from nineteenth-century detective fiction to contemporary performance art, Hsu investigates modernity's varied atmospheres. The discussion spans from the industrial revolution to current environmental crises, employing ecocriticism, geography, and critical race studies. It addresses issues such as Latinx communities facing freeway exhaust and pesticides, Asian diasporic artists confronting racialized perceptions of odors, and the impact of settler colonialism on Indigenous smellscapes. Hsu reveals the violence inherent in air maintenance and control, particularly affecting marginalized populations. Through this lens, the book offers a compelling retelling of urbanization, public health, and environmental violenc

      The Smell of Risk
    • Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things.Air conditioning aspires to be unnoticed. Yet, by manipulating the air around us, it quietly conditions the baseline conditions of our physical, mental, and emotional experience. From offices and libraries to contemporary art museums and shopping malls, climate control systems shore up the fantasy of a comfortable, self-contained body that does not have to reckon with temperature. At the same time that air conditioning makes temperature a non-issue in (some) people's daily lives, thermoception-or the sensory perception of temperature-is being carefully studied and exploited as a tool of marketing, social control, and labor management.Yet air conditioning isn't for its reliance on carbon fuels divides the world into habitable, climate-controlled bubbles and increasingly uninhabitable environments where AC is unavailable. Hsuan Hsu's Air Conditioning explores questions about culture, ethics, ecology, and social justice raised by the history and uneven distribution of climate controlling technologies.Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.

      Air Conditioning