âIn her extraordinary book, Heather Davis traces plasticâs haunting colonial legacies, proliferating environmental violences, and queer futurities, showing how plastic represents both the dreams and the horrors of Western modernity. This rich and absorbing book is invaluable for understanding one of the most useful, destructive, and disconcerting substances of the Anthropocene.â
- Stacy Alaimo, author of, Exposed: Environmental Politics and Pleasures in Posthuman Times
âThere is no outside of plastic. Rejecting a purity politics in favor of figuring plastic as our queer progeny, this book reckons with plasticity from an intimate epistemological and material inside. In a world where the lure of plasticity remains inseparable from fossil-fueled white supremacist utopias, Heather Davis asks us to think honestly about the kinds of futures we desire when plastic simply âwonât let go.ââ
- Astrida Neimanis, Canada Research Chair in Feminist Environmental Humanities, University of British Columbia Okanagan,
âDavis offers a thoroughly engaging examination of material relations, focusing particularly on people's current relationship to plastic and notions of plasticity. . . . [<i>Plastic Matter</i>] has relevance for scholars and adult general readers with widely divergent interests and in various fields. Highly recommended.â
- M. Marinucci, Choice
âThrough wide-ranging examples of media artworks, in situ cases, and chemical disruptions to the body, and within a framework of queer affordances that is less emphatic about non-reproductivity and extinction, [Davis] demonstrates that there can be, and most certainty still is, beauty, curiosity, new lifeforms, and queer kin among the toxicity that teach us much about facing a future filled with suffering, death, decline, joy, survival, flourishing, and hope.â
- Emily Collins, ISLE
â<i>Plastic Matter </i>is a stellar addition to the Duke Elements series and a must-read for anyone engaging with contemporary conversations about material responsibilities in a world where contamination cannot be escaped. . . . For contemporary theory, the writing is equal parts beautiful and accessible, with Davis generously explaining adopted concepts in her own words rather than alienating with jargon. This clarity means her exemplary theoretical contributions are at the same time very readable.â
- Kim De Wolff, H-Sci-Med-Tech, H-Net Reviews
"<i>Plastic Matter</i> is convincing in putting forth its arguments because first and foremost, it is an engaged and involved scholarly work. . . . Acknowledging the harm and violence caused by plastic while simultaneously proposing a type of kinship both with plastic and plastic-eating bacteria and fungi is a difficult split that Davis nonetheless manages gracefully."
- Svenja Engelmann-Kewitz, Edge Effects
"Unwrapping <i>Plastic Matter </i>thus invited me to reevaluate my own molds, including my morning routine. Scholars across the fields of queer theory, media studies, environmental political theory, and new materialisms will find Davisâs <i>Plastic Matter</i> similarly inviting and challenging."
- Chayne Wild, Lateral