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Recycling

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Recycling

Written by: Finn Arne Jorgensen
Narrated by: Keith Sellon-Wright
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Is there a point to recycling? Is recycling even good for the environment? In this volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series, Finn Arne Jørgensen answers: it depends. From a technical point of view, recycling is a series of processes - collecting, sorting, processing, manufacturing. Recycling also has a cultural component; at its core, recycling is about transformation and value, turning material waste into something useful - plastic bags into patio furniture, plastic bottles into T-shirts. Jørgensen offers an accessible and engaging overview of recycling as an activity and as a process at the intersection of the material and the ideological.  

Jørgensen follows a series of materials as they move back and forth between producer and consumer. He considers organic waste and cultural contamination; the history of recyclable writing surfaces from papyrus to newsprint; discarded clothing as it moves from the the Global North to the Global South; the shifting fate of glass bottles; the efficiency of aluminum recycling; e-waste and technological obsolescence; and industrial waste. Finally, re-asking the question posed by John Tierney in an infamous 1996 New York Times article, "is recycling garbage?" Jørgensen argues that recycling is necessary - as both symbolic action and physical activity that has a tangible effect on the real world.

©2019 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (P)2019 Gildan Media
Environment Environmental Nature & Ecology Outdoors & Nature Politics & Government Public Policy Science
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Book very well explains different materials that result into waste and how they evolved to the current form. One area that it could have included is the possible recommendations for best way to recycle each kind.

A holistic summary of the waste and its history

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