Starter Kit: “[Title]”
Description
[For example: What can a critical infrastructural studies approach to romanticism—one that takes the perspective of materials, structures, systems, and their human and labor impact—allow us to see and think that other methods of reading cannot? If infrastructure, by one common definition, is that which is the “invisible” support of life and death, freedom and constraint, knowledge and work, information and art, and many other facets of modern existence, how can such invisible structures serve as an instrument for making new or other dimensions of romanticism visible? This starter kit draws on selected strands of the emerging “critical infrastructure studies” field, including: “large technical systems” research in science-technology studies; Susan Leigh Star’s ethnographical approach; media and information infrastructure studies; feminist infrastructural approaches; and the “repair” and “junkspace” critical movements.
Readings
Framing [vary these section titles as needed]
Brief description here if useful [e.g., “Two key works to begin with.” Links to external materials not on the CIstudies.org site should be coded to open in a new tab; i.e., target=”_blank”]
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
Foundations [vary these section titles as needed]
Brief description here if useful [e.g., “A micro-anthology of both established and emergent approaches to infrastructure studies, represented by key works.”]
Subheading
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
Subheading
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
Subheading
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
Subheading
- Author. “Title.” Citation. Adapted version of paper last presented in full at University of Connecticut, Storrs, February 23, 2017. http://[visible URL (so that starter kits are useful if printed)]
Gallery
A small gallery of [description here]. [Examples of images and formatting are included below. Just replace as needed. Images for the gallery should if possible live elsewhere and be called into this page using the <img src=”[URL]” alt=”[description]” width=”[xx]”> tag. If you need media uploaded to the CIstudies.org site itself, please let Alan Liu know.]
Exhibit 1

Midtown Cottage, Brampton, Westmorland
Reproduced in the chapter on “The Economy of Lyric: The Ruined Cottage” in Alan Liu, Wordsworth: The Sense of History (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1989), 242, from R. W. Brunskill,”The Development of the Small House in the Eden Valley from 1650 to 1840,” Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaelogical Society, new series, 53 (1954): 160-89. (Larger image )
Exhibit 2
Field enclosures
On the infrastructural design of enclosures in the 18th-19th centuries, see The Enclosure Acts (British Literature Wiki) and Parliamentary Enclosure (Buckinghamshire County Council)
Exhibits 3-5
Roads, Mills, and Mines From Chris Cook and John Stevenson, Longman Atlas of Modern British History: A Visual Guide to British Society and Politics, 1700-1970 (London: 1978): 26, 40, 56. |
Exhibit 6
Edinburgh Stage Coach advertisement in The Edinburgh Courant, 1754
See “18th Century Road and Coach Improvements” by “Vic” on Jane Austen’s World blog, December 28, 2008.
Exhibit 7
Cross sections of three 18th-century European roads designed by Pierre Trésaguet, Thomas Telford, and John McAdam
From Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. See Maxwell Gordon Lay and Fred J. Benson, “Road and Highways,” Encyclopædia Britannica.
Exhibit 8
Brontëan Abstracts (Cornelia Parker)
“Turner prize-nominated artist Cornelia Parker developed new work in response to the Parsonage collection, enabling Museum visitors to see the Brontës interpreted through the work of a major British artist. Cornelia Parker was interested in exploring the underside of the Brontës’ monumentality and this remarkable body of new work offered new perspectives on the myths and stereotypes that have been built around the Brontës, challenging our preconceptions about them. The Brontës’ items were examined in new ways, to explore marks left unconsciously – the pin pricks in Charlotte’s pin cushion, ink blots on blotting paper and the scribblings out on manuscripts – as well microscopic views of Charlotte’s quill pen and analysis conducted on samples of their hair.”

Exhibit 9

John Martin, Plans for London Sewage System, 1828
From A Plan for Improving the Air and Water of the Metropolis, by Preventing the Sewage Being Conveyed into the Thames, Thereby Preserving Not Only the Purity of the Air but the Purity of the Water, and Likewise the Manure for Agricultural Purposes, 1832 (London: Plummer and Brewis). See Lars Kokkonen’s commentary; and World of John Martin web site.
Exhibit 10
Kurt Schwitters, Merzbarn Wall
“Schwitters, a refugee … began taking holidays in the Lake District in 1943. He settled in Ambleside in 1945. At the house of an acquaintance Mr Harry Pierce of Waithwaite House, Langdale, Schwitters began his third Merzbau [sculpture] — the first in Hanover having been destroyed in an Allied air raid in 1943, and the second, constructed when Schwitters was a refugee in Norway, still intact in 1944 but shortly to be destroyed in an accidental fire of 1951. The Langdale strucure, removed in 1965 to the Hatton Gallery in the University of Newcastle, is thus the sole remaining sculpture by Schwitters in this post-Dada idiom that employs the pasted up detritus of civilization. Aesthetically, it is a document of Lake District culture history analogous to Wordworth’s Preface to the Lyrical Ballads.”
Exhibit 11
C-print, 47,5 x 60,3 cm
Framed 68,5 x 80 cm
Edition of 5 (+ 2 AP)
Joachim Koester, Kant Walks (#1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7)
From Joachim Koester, Morning of the Magicians and Other Works, exhibition at Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen, January 13 – February 25, 2006. See Artist’s Statement and gallery introduction.
Additional Materials
An assortment of other materials for those interested in pursuing the focus of this starter kit further.