Jan Bartsch

Metabolic Apparatusses in or of the Anthropocene. The Political Ecology of Aquaponics

My Research is concerned with metabolic apparatuses in or of the Anthropocene. More specifically I am working on the Political Ecology of Aquaponics. Aquaponics is an experimental technology in which seemingly natural metabolic cycles between fish and plants are used to produce food. Against this background, I address the seemingly contradictory relationship between economic rationalities and ecological sustainability within alternative food production. I try to grasp this relation with the term metabolism in order to show immanent power relations on the one hand and to trace the diverse entanglements of human and other-than-human worlds on the other hand. Through an ethnographically informed understanding of metabolism, it is possible to show how new forms of urban food production imply political factors and at the same time entail contingencies and unpredictable outcomes.

Research Interests
  • Urban Political Ecology
  • Science and Technology Studies
  • More-than-human ethnography
  • Metabolism Studies
  • Environmental Sociology
Vita
  • Since 2020
    PhD  Scholarship holder of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation
  • 2016 – 2019
    M.A. Cultural- and Social anthropology at the Philipps-University of Marburg
  • 2010 – 2016
    B.A. Political Science and Cultural Studies at the University of Bremen
Publications
Talks, Workshops and Events
  • 2022
    Talk Metabolic Apparatuses in Urban food production. The Political Ecology of Aquaponics
  • 19. – 20.05.2022
    Conference Exploring Unruly Sites of more-than-human Entanglements, AG Environmental Anthropology
  • 2022
    Talk Metabolizing Ethnography. Aquaponics and the Anthropocene
  • 28. – 30.06.2022
    Conference METABOLISM STUDIES: MATERIALITY AND RELATIONALITY IN THE ANTHROPOCENE at the Scientific Research Symposium, Lyon France
relational

“At first I thought contradiction was always a relational thing; but the more I ponder it, the more I think contradiction creates relation.”

Ingo H. Warnke
decolonial scholarship

“Creating decentralizing and decolonizing scholarship on contradiction, contradictory phenomena, and contradicting processes is a challenging task.”

Kerstin Knopf
l’illusion d’une unité

“Foucault speaks of contradiction as l’illusion d’une unité.”

Ingo H. Warnke
Bhabha on enlightenment and coloniality

“Homi Bhabha says about the contradiction between the ideals of the enlightenment, claims to democracy and solidarity and simultaneous colonization and ongoing coloniality: ‘That ideological tension, visible in the history of the West as a despotic power, at the very moment of the birth of democracy and modernity, has not been adequately written in a contradictory and contrapuntal discourse of tradition.’”

Kerstin Knopf
every day

“Living in contradictions is what we experience every day. Why do we know so little about it?”

Gisela Febel