Container Ships (completed)

(Dis-)Assembling the Life Cycle of Container Ships. Global Ethnographic explorations into Maritime Working Lives.

Image may contain: Vehicle, Water transportation, Boat, Ship, Container ship.

Containership Truman and Kennedy at San Francisco. By NOAA [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

About the project

The container ship is the most significant icon of economic globalization. An ever-growing amount of commodities in circulation on this planet end up in stores after having been transported on container ships first. The ubiquity of the image of the container ship as a stand-in for globalization, typically used as a stock photo to signal “global business” in many media contexts, stands in contradiction to a rather peculiar issue: the object so often depicted upon closer inspection turns out to be vastly understudied, especially amongst social scientists. This is particularly true when it comes to the worlds of maritime work around container ships that are usually operating far away from the spotlight of concerned end-consumers of the goods being transported on them.

Shipbuilding, shipping, and ship-breaking are three key maritime industries that make up the most central nodes enabling the life cycle of a container ship. The objective of the project is to shed new light on the globe-spanning networks around these vessels, and on the workers that are involved in making, maintaining, and breaking the ships. By uniting three ethnographic sub-projects - one focusing on shipbuilding in South Korea and the Philippines, one on global shipping process, and one on ship-breaking in South Asia – the focus is also on the connections and disjunctures between the different components that make, maintain, and break container ships. The combination of ethnography with a large-scale "interpretive" comparison-making perspective will allow for the exploration of some of the key social, political and economic relations that feed into global economic processes today.

Financing 

The project is funded with NOK 7 992 000 under the FRIPRO-"Young Research Talent"-Scheme of the Norwegian Research Council, and will run between 2018-2023.

By NOAA's National Ocean Service (Flickr: Container Ship) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
By NOAA's National Ocean Service (Flickr: Container Ship) [CC BY-SA 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

 

Publications

  • Dewan, Camelia & Sibilia, Elizabeth Anne (2024). Introduction to special issue: “Scaled ethnographies of toxic flows”. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space. ISSN 2399-6544. doi: 10.1177/23996544231218826.
  • Dewan, Camelia (2024). Polluted Transformations of Fluid Commons: Lived experiences of shipbreaking in coastal Bangladesh. Social Analysis: The International Journal of Anthropology. ISSN 0155-977X.
  • Dewan, Camelia (2024). Affective Assemblages of Kinship and Women's Migration in a "climate hotspot". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. ISSN 1359-0987.
  • Dewan, Camelia (2023). Toxic Residues in Fluid Commons: More-Than-Economic Dispossession and Shipbreaking in Coastal Bangladesh. Ethnos. ISSN 0014-1844. doi: 10.1080/00141844.2023.2208309. Full text in Research Archive
  • Dewan, Camelia & Sibilia, Elizabeth Anne (2023). Global containments and local leakages: Structural violence and the toxic flows of shipbreaking. Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space. ISSN 2399-6544. doi: 10.1177/23996544231208202. Full text in Research Archive
  • Dewan, Camelia (2023). Climate refugees or labour migrants? Climate reductive translations of women’s migration from coastal Bangladesh. Journal of Peasant Studies. ISSN 0306-6150. doi: 10.1080/03066150.2023.2195555. Full text in Research Archive
  • Schober, Elisabeth; Dewan, Camelia & Markkula, Johanna (2022). Life-Cycle of Container Ships: Chains of Value and Labour in Maritime Logistics. Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of Anthropology. doi: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190854584.013.374.
  • Dewan, Camelia; Schober, Elisabeth & Markkula, Johanna (2022). Container Ships: Life Cycles, Chains of Value, and Labor in Maritime Logistics. Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford (JASO). ISSN 2040-1876. doi: 10.1093/acrefore/9780190854584.013.374.
  • Schober, Elisabeth (2022). Working the supply chain: towards an anthropology of maritime logistics. In Kasmir, Sharryn & Gill, Lesley (Ed.), The Routledge Handbook of the Anthropology of Labor. Routledge. ISSN 9781003158448.
  • Dewan, Camelia (2021). Embanking the Sundarbans: The Obfuscating Discourse of Climate Change. In Sillitoe, Paul (Eds.), THE ANTHROPOSCENE OF WEATHER AND CLIMATE: Ethnographic Contributions to the Climate Change Debate. Berghahn Books. ISSN 978-1-80073-231-5. p. 294–321.
  • Schober, Elisabeth & Leivestad, Hege (2021). Politics of scale: Colossal containerships and the crisis in global shipping. Anthropology Today. ISSN 0268-540X. 37(3), p. 3–7. doi: 10.1111/1467-8322.12650.
  • Dewan, Camelia (2021). Durniti or Durbolata: Self-Policing, Social Relations and Regulative Weakness in the Everyday Lives of Bangladeshi Government Officials. In Ruud, Arild Engelsen & Hasan, Mubashar (Ed.), Masks of authoritarianism: hegemony, power and public life in Bangladesh. Palgrave Macmillan. ISSN 9789811643132. p. 155–172. doi: 10.1007/978-981-16-4314-9_10.
  • Markkula, Johanna (2021). ‘We move the world’: the mobile labor of Filipino seafarers. Mobilities. ISSN 1745-0101. 16(2), p. 164–177. doi: 10.1080/17450101.2021.1880129.
  • Markkula, Johanna (2021). Containing Mobilities: Shifting Time and Space of Maritime Labor. Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology. ISSN 0920-1297. 89 . doi: 10.3167/fcl.2021.890103. Full text in Research Archive
  • Markkula, Johanna & Leivestad, Hege (2021). Introduction: Inside Container Economies. Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology. ISSN 0920-1297. 89. doi: 10.3167/fcl.2021.890101. Full text in Research Archive
  • Schober, Elisabeth (2021). Building ships while breaking apart. Container Economies and the Limits of Chaebol Capitalism. Focaal: Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology. ISSN 0920-1297. 89. doi: 10.3167/fcl.2021.890102. Full text in Research Archive
  • Dewan, Camelia (2020). Climate Change as a Spice: Brokering Environmental Knowledge in Bangladesh's Development Industry. Ethnos. ISSN 0014-1844. doi: 10.1080/00141844.2020.1788109. Full text in Research Archive
  • Schober, Elisabeth (2019). Riding unstable currents: South Korean capital's migration to the Philippines. Rivista degli Studi Orientali. ISSN 1724-1863. 93(1-2), p. 263–277. doi: 10.19272/201903804016.

View all works in Cristin

View all works in Cristin

Published Mar. 13, 2018 1:12 PM - Last modified June 6, 2024 2:16 PM