TRAVELING TECHNOLOGIES: Infrastructure, Ethical Regimes, and the Materiality of Politics in South Africa
In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the "travels" of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many resi...
Gespeichert in:
| Veröffentlicht in: | Cultural anthropology Jg. 28; H. 4; S. 670 - 693 |
|---|---|
| 1. Verfasser: | |
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Veröffentlicht: |
Hoboken, NJ
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
01.11.2013
Wiley American Anthropological Association |
| Schlagworte: | |
| ISSN: | 0886-7356, 1548-1360 |
| Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
| Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
| Abstract | In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the "travels" of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro-political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno-political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working-class "moral improvement,"to the late-apartheid period, when it was reassembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti-apartheid "rent boycotts." In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic-material work required to make the device functional in the post-apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. |
|---|---|
| AbstractList | In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the "travels" of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro-political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno-political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working-class "moral improvement,"to the late-apartheid period, when it was reassembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti-apartheid "rent boycotts." In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic-material work required to make the device functional in the post-apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the 'travels' of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro-political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno-political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working-class 'moral improvement,' to the late-apartheid period, when it was re-assembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti-apartheid 'rent boycotts.' In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic-material work required to make the device functional in the post-apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. Reprinted by permission of the American Anthropological Association and the University of California Press In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the 'travels' of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro-political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno-political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working-class 'moral improvement,' to the late-apartheid period, when it was re-assembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti-apartheid 'rent boycotts.' In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic-material work required to make the device functional in the post-apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. Adapted from the source document. ABSTRACT In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the “travels” of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro‐political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno‐political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working‐class “moral improvement,” to the late‐apartheid period, when it was re‐assembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti‐apartheid “rent boycotts.” In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic‐material work required to make the device functional in the post‐apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the "travels" of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid, prepaid meters have been widely deployed in South Africa's townships to curb the nonpayment of service charges. Yet many residents have bypassed their meters, enabling them to illicitly access electricity or water. I track the micro-political battle between residents tinkering with the technology and engineers trying to secure it, arguing that infrastructure itself becomes a political terrain for the negotiation of central ethical and political questions concerning civic virtue and the shape of citizenship. To investigate this techno-political terrain, I trace a genealogy of the meter from Victorian Britain, when it was invented as a tool of working-class "moral improvement," to the late-apartheid period, when it was re-assembled as a device of counterinsurgency against the anti-apartheid "rent boycotts." In each moment, I suggest, the meter was harnessed to distinct ethical regimes and political projects. Drawing on my ethnographic fieldwork with engineers in contemporary South Africa, I explore the semiotic-material work required to make the device functional in the post-apartheid moment. Tracing the travels of a small technical device across time and space, I argue, opens up conceptual space to rethink the relationship between ethics, politics, and technics. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
| Author | VON SCHNITZLER, ANTINA |
| Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: ANTINA surname: VON SCHNITZLER fullname: VON SCHNITZLER, ANTINA |
| BackLink | http://pascal-francis.inist.fr/vibad/index.php?action=getRecordDetail&idt=27953990$$DView record in Pascal Francis |
| BookMark | eNqNkc1OGzEUha2KSg2UTZ_AUlWpCwb8O2N3F0VTiBQCgtCt5fF4iKOJB2yPqrw9DiBasWnv5l7J3z22zzkEB37wFoAvGJ3iXGdm1P4UE0TJBzDBnIkC0xIdgAkSoiwqystP4DDGDUIZQmwC1qub6a96MV-ew1U9u1heLa7O5_XtDzj3XdAxhdGkMdgTWKe1M7qHN_bebW08gdq3MK0tvNTJBqd7l3Zw6OD1kCdnInQe3g5jWsNpF_LmZ_Cx0320x6_9CNz9rFezi2J_4Wy6KDaMIFKwtjGk4dwK3lWdwIRwIU2DbEtNKxCSjTS6lK2wXUmkwMbojLKWN5TjrjL0CHx_0X0Iw-NoY1JbF43te-3tMEaFedbEEjP2nyjPj_g3ykqKiOQYZfTrO3QzjMHnP2eKMS4okmWmvr1SOmZbs9feuKgegtvqsFOkkpxKuVfDL9xv19vd2zlGap-32uetnvNWs7vp8nn6o72JaQh_7xCKKsWokIIjQp8A5PSpXA |
| CODEN | CUANE3 |
| ContentType | Journal Article |
| Copyright | 2013 American Anthropological Association 2013 by the American Anthropological Association 2015 INIST-CNRS Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Nov 2013 |
| Copyright_xml | – notice: 2013 American Anthropological Association – notice: 2013 by the American Anthropological Association – notice: 2015 INIST-CNRS – notice: Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Nov 2013 |
| DBID | IQODW 7U4 8BJ BHHNA DWI FQK JBE WZK 7UB |
| DOI | 10.1111/cuan.12032 |
| DatabaseName | Pascal-Francis Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017) International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS) Sociological Abstracts Sociological Abstracts International Bibliography of the Social Sciences International Bibliography of the Social Sciences Sociological Abstracts (Ovid) Worldwide Political Science Abstracts |
| DatabaseTitle | Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017) International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS) Sociological Abstracts Worldwide Political Science Abstracts |
| DatabaseTitleList | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS) Worldwide Political Science Abstracts Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017) Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017) |
| DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
| Discipline | Anthropology |
| EISSN | 1548-1360 |
| EndPage | 693 |
| ExternalDocumentID | 3107623701 27953990 CUAN12032 43898502 |
| Genre | article |
| GeographicLocations | South Africa |
| GeographicLocations_xml | – name: South Africa |
| GrantInformation_xml | – fundername: Wenner‐Gren Foundation – fundername: The New School |
| GroupedDBID | -DZ -~X .3N .GA .Y3 05W 10A 1OC 29F 4.4 50Z 51W 51Y 52M 52O 52Q 52S 52T 52W 5GY 5HH 5LA 66C 6J9 702 7PT 8-0 8-1 8-3 8-4 8-5 8UM 930 A04 AAKDD AAMMB AAZSN ABAWQ ABBHK ABCQN ABEML ABJNI ABXSQ ACGFO ACGFS ACGOD ACHJO ACHQT ACNCT ACRTY ACSCC ACXQS ADMHG ADULT ADZJE AEFGJ AEUPB AFBPY AFDVO AFFNX AFZJQ AGTJU AGXDD AIDQK AIDYY ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS APXXL BDRZF BENPR BKOMP BY8 CS3 D-C D-D DR2 DU5 EBS EJD ESI F00 F01 F5P FRJ FRP FRS GODZA GROUPED_DOAJ HOLLA HZI HZ~ H~9 IPSME IX1 JAAYA JAC JBMMH JBZCM JENOY JHFFW JKQEH JLEZI JLXEF JPL JST LC2 LC4 LH4 LP6 LP7 LW6 M1D M2S MK4 N04 N06 N9A OIG P2P P2Y P4C Q11 QB0 QF4 QN7 QO5 RCZ ROL RXW SA0 SUPJJ TAE TN5 UB1 UPT V8K W8V WQZ WYN XG1 ~45 ~IA ~WP 0-V 31~ 5VS 88I 8AF 8AO 8FW 8G5 8R4 8R5 AAFWJ AANHP AAWJA ABPVG ABUWG ACBWZ ACRPL ACYXJ ADBBV ADMHC ADNMO AFKRA AFPKN AGQPQ AIMQZ ALSLI ARALO ASOEW ASPBG AS~ AVQMV AVWKF AZFZN AZQEC BCNDV BFHJK BPHCQ CAG CCPQU COF DWQXO FEDTE FXEWX GNUQQ GUQSH H13 HCIFZ HEHIP HGD HVGLF JFNAL K50 LIQON M2O M2P M2Q M2R MVM OK1 PEJEM PHGZM PHGZT PIMPY PMKZF POGQB PQQKQ PRG PROAC PRQQA PUEGO Q2X QZG S0X WIN AAHHS ACCFJ ADZOD AEEZP AEQDE AIWBW AJBDE IQODW 7U4 8BJ ALUQN BHHNA DWI FQK JBE WZK 7UB |
| ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-j4202-4dbc2b55e85f7f8122589cb0ed3cd8009b9ca69d8ef62981ccae854d5b351f7c3 |
| IEDL.DBID | WIN |
| ISICitedReferencesCount | 222 |
| ISICitedReferencesURI | http://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=Summon&SrcAuth=ProQuest&DestLinkType=CitingArticles&DestApp=WOS_CPL&KeyUT=000329291100009&url=https%3A%2F%2Fcvtisr.summon.serialssolutions.com%2F%23%21%2Fsearch%3Fho%3Df%26include.ft.matches%3Dt%26l%3Dnull%26q%3D |
| ISSN | 0886-7356 |
| IngestDate | Sun Nov 09 10:08:17 EST 2025 Thu Sep 04 15:11:57 EDT 2025 Thu Sep 04 15:25:15 EDT 2025 Mon Nov 10 21:30:25 EST 2025 Tue May 20 00:21:51 EDT 2025 Sun Sep 21 06:22:50 EDT 2025 Thu Jul 03 22:32:21 EDT 2025 |
| IsDoiOpenAccess | false |
| IsOpenAccess | true |
| IsPeerReviewed | true |
| IsScholarly | true |
| Issue | 4 |
| Keywords | Infrastructure Ethics Citizenship Politics Materiality Technology |
| Language | English |
| License | CC BY 4.0 |
| LinkModel | DirectLink |
| MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-j4202-4dbc2b55e85f7f8122589cb0ed3cd8009b9ca69d8ef62981ccae854d5b351f7c3 |
| Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 ObjectType-Article-2 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 |
| OpenAccessLink | https://doi.org/10.1111/cuan.12032 |
| PQID | 1444583096 |
| PQPubID | 36272 |
| PageCount | 24 |
| ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_1512219144 proquest_miscellaneous_1512215812 proquest_miscellaneous_1463029510 proquest_journals_1444583096 pascalfrancis_primary_27953990 wiley_primary_10_1111_cuan_12032_CUAN12032 jstor_primary_10_2307_43898502 |
| PublicationCentury | 2000 |
| PublicationDate | November 2013 |
| PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2013-11-01 |
| PublicationDate_xml | – month: 11 year: 2013 text: November 2013 |
| PublicationDecade | 2010 |
| PublicationPlace | Hoboken, NJ |
| PublicationPlace_xml | – name: Hoboken, NJ – name: Washington |
| PublicationTitle | Cultural anthropology |
| PublicationYear | 2013 |
| Publisher | Wiley Subscription Services, Inc Wiley American Anthropological Association |
| Publisher_xml | – name: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc – name: Wiley – name: American Anthropological Association |
| References | 2007; 19 2012 2011 2010 2011; 40 2009 2008 2008; 108 2008; 12 2007 2003; 15 2008; 34 1999; 43 1995 2005 1994 2004 2007; 50 1992 2003 2002 1991 2007; 34 2004; 30 2010; 20 1990 2001 2000; 30 1987 1986 2005; 31 1983 2001; 16 2012; 27 2012; 26 1980 2012; 24 |
| References_xml | – year: 2011 – start-page: 1850 year: 1983 end-page: 1914 – volume: 26 start-page: 542 issue: 4 year: 2012 end-page: 564 article-title: Pressure: The Politechnics of Water Supply in Mumbai publication-title: Cultural Anthropology – volume: 24 start-page: 157 issue: 66 year: 2012 end-page: 184 article-title: Bioexpectations: Life Technologies as Humanitarian Goods publication-title: Public Culture – year: 2009 – volume: 50 start-page: 71 issue: 2 year: 2007 end-page: 86 article-title: Formalities of Poverty: Thinking about Social Assistance in Neoliberal South Africa publication-title: African Studies Review – volume: 15 start-page: 385 issue: 3 year: 2003 end-page: 397 article-title: Technologies of Public Forms: Circulation, Transfiguration, Recognition publication-title: Public Culture – year: 2005 – start-page: 225 year: 1992 end-page: 258 – year: 2001 – year: 1987 – year: 2007 – volume: 12 start-page: 1 issue: 1 year: 2008 end-page: 28 article-title: The Case of Johannesburg Water: What Really Happened at the Pre‐Paid ‘Parish Pump publication-title: Law, Democracy & Development – year: 2003 – volume: 27 start-page: 3 issue: 1 year: 2012 end-page: 27 article-title: Blackouts and Progress: Privatization, Infrastructure, and a Developmentalist State in Jimma, Ethiopia publication-title: Cultural Anthropology – volume: 34 start-page: 57 issue: 111 year: 2007 end-page: 66 article-title: Struggles around the Commodification of Daily Life in South Africa publication-title: Review of African Political Economy – year: 1990 – start-page: 19 year: 1980 end-page: 39 – year: 1992 – year: 1994 – year: 2010 – start-page: 205 year: 1992 end-page: 224 – year: 2012 – volume: 30 start-page: 225 issue: 2 year: 2004 end-page: 248 article-title: Why Has Critique Run out of Steam? From Matters of Fact to Matters of Concern publication-title: Critical Inquiry – start-page: 58 year: 1991 end-page: 99 – volume: 19 start-page: 197 issue: 1 year: 2007 end-page: 219 article-title: Beyond the Politics of Bare Life: Aids and the Global Order publication-title: Public Culture – volume: 30 start-page: 225 issue: 2 year: 2000 end-page: 263 article-title: The Zimbabwe Bush Pump: Mechanics of a Fluid Technology publication-title: Social Studies of Science – year: 1986 – volume: 40 start-page: 213 issue: 1 year: 2011 end-page: 226 article-title: Policing Borders, Producing Boundaries: The Governmentality of Immigration in Dark Times publication-title: Annual Review of Anthropology – volume: 108 start-page: 312 issue: 2 year: 2008 end-page: 323 article-title: From ‘Rights’ to ‘Ritual’: Aids Activism in South Africa publication-title: American Anthropologist – volume: 31 start-page: 267 issue: 2 year: 2005 end-page: 282 article-title: The Biometric State: The Promise and Peril of Digital Government in the New South Africa publication-title: Journal of Southern African Studies – volume: 34 start-page: 621 issue: 4 year: 2007 end-page: 641 article-title: An Anthropologist Underwater: Immersive Soundscapes, Submarine Cyborgs, and Transductive Ethnography publication-title: American Ethnologist – start-page: 311 year: 2007 end-page: 357 – volume: 24 start-page: 109 issue: 1 year: 2012 end-page: 129 article-title: Next Practices: Knowledge, Infrastructure, and Public Goods at the Bottom of the Pyramid publication-title: Public Culture – year: 2002 – year: 2008 – year: 2004 – volume: 20 start-page: 406 issue: 2 year: 2010 end-page: 421 article-title: Enemies, Parasites, and Noise: How to Take Up Residence in a System without Becoming a Term in It publication-title: Journal of Linguistic Anthropology – year: 1995 – volume: 34 start-page: 899 issue: 4 year: 2008 end-page: 917 article-title: Citizenship Prepaid: Water, Calculability and Techno‐Politics in South Africa publication-title: Journal of Southern African Studies – volume: 16 start-page: 3 issue: 1 year: 2001 end-page: 34 article-title: Civic Virtue and Religious Reason: An Islamic Counterpublic publication-title: Cultural Anthropology – volume: 43 start-page: 377 issue: 3 year: 1999 end-page: 391 article-title: The Ethnography of Infrastructure publication-title: American Behavioral Scientist |
| SSID | ssj0012004 |
| Score | 2.4768925 |
| Snippet | In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the "travels" of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid,... ABSTRACT In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the “travels” of a small technical device. Since the end of... In this article, I explore the politics of infrastructure in South Africa by focusing on the 'travels' of a small technical device. Since the end of apartheid,... |
| SourceID | proquest pascalfrancis wiley jstor |
| SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
| StartPage | 670 |
| SubjectTerms | Africa Apartheid Citizenship Counterinsurgency Electricity Engineers Ethics Ethnography Ethnology Fieldwork Genealogy Infrastructure materiality Morality Negotiation Nonpayment Politics Post-apartheid era Rents Residents Rhythm Semiotics Services Social relations. Intercultural and interethnic relations. Collective identity Social structure and social relations South Africa Space and Time Technology Townships Travel Water Working Class |
| Title | TRAVELING TECHNOLOGIES: Infrastructure, Ethical Regimes, and the Materiality of Politics in South Africa |
| URI | https://www.jstor.org/stable/43898502 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fcuan.12032 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1444583096 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1463029510 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1512215812 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1512219144 |
| Volume | 28 |
| WOSCitedRecordID | wos000329291100009&url=https%3A%2F%2Fcvtisr.summon.serialssolutions.com%2F%23%21%2Fsearch%3Fho%3Df%26include.ft.matches%3Dt%26l%3Dnull%26q%3D |
| hasFullText | 1 |
| inHoldings | 1 |
| isFullTextHit | |
| isPrint | |
| journalDatabaseRights | – providerCode: PRVWIB databaseName: Wiley Online Library Free Content customDbUrl: eissn: 1548-1360 dateEnd: 20211231 omitProxy: false ssIdentifier: ssj0012004 issn: 0886-7356 databaseCode: WIN dateStart: 19970101 isFulltext: true titleUrlDefault: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com providerName: Wiley-Blackwell |
| link | http://cvtisr.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1LS8NAEB6KeBDBt1itZQVPYiXvbMRLKa0t1CDaam9hs9n4OKRiWsF_78wmre1FEW-BTDfbzszmm-638wGcSmF4pLjdSD2usEBBX3Ai2MhYeAECEDORumV-3w9DPhoFtxW4mp2FKfpDzP9wo8zQ6zUluIjzhSSXU5FdmCQAjguw6eisfOyF8y0Ecn8BIb2Gb7te2ZuUaDzfH52xEIkSKXL8VdJCzmIJby6iVv3a6Wz-b8JbsFHCTdYs4mMbKirbgfUFdYTPXXge3DUf2v1eeM0G7VY31PoI7ftL1stwnkWD2em7OmeaG4-j3aknOjhyzkSWMASQ7EZMdCAjomfjlJWcupy9ZExL9LFCjWgPhp32oNVtlAIMjVfHwpXSSWJpxa6ruJv6KUIBy-WBjA2V2DJBpBnEgUSXJlylnhVwE6MBTZ3EjW3XTH1p78NKNs7UATBbECHOSDSg8JXiWCh5ypY4NlawsahCXTsieiuabERYnBBHPSJ1du4aFhoseWhuaPkBddc1qlCbuSwq8zDHwsahjWGs06pwMr-NGUTbIiJT4ynZeLZhEdL8wQZxEYIjnPxvNgE-sgpnOhAWv4yutCgEIh0CUWvYDPXV4V-Mj2DNIj0OfRiyBisYAuoYVuXH5CV_r-sE-AJwTwT9 |
| linkProvider | Wiley-Blackwell |
| linkToHtml | http://cvtisr.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1LS8NAEB58gSL4FuujruBJWknz2Gy8lVJtsQ2irfQWNpuNj0Mq1gr-e2c2sbYXRbwFMkk2mW-Sb7Kz8wGcKmlxUtyuplxoTFDQF4IKbFQseYAEpJYo0zK_44ehGAyCm6I2h9bC5P0hJj_cKDLM-5oCnH5IT0W5GsvsvEYK4POw6HKk7rSgpB1OJhEIADmJ5FXf8XjRnZQKeb6P_apDpKJIOcLnkuaCFjOMc5q3mg_P5fo_h7wBawXjZPUcIpswp7MtWJ0SSPjYhsfebf2-2WmHV6zXbLRCI5HQvLtg7QwHmveYHb_qCjPl8Xi2W_1Aa0cqTGYJQw7JuvLNYBlJPRumrCirG7GnjBmVPpYLEu1A_7LZa7SqhQZD9dm18WXpJrGyY8_Twkv9FNmA7YlAxZZOHJUg2QziQKFXE6FTbgeihoBAUzfxYserpb5ydmEhG2Z6D5gjqSbOSgyn8LUWmCtx7Sg8NyaxsSxB2Xgiesn7bESYn1CZekQC7cKzbDSYcdHE0PYDarBrleDwy2dREYojzG1cmhvGVK0EJ5PdGEQ0MyIzPRyTDXcsm8jmDzZIjZAf4eB_swnwkiU4M0iYvhmTbBEEIgOBqNGvh2Zr_y_Gx7Dc6nU7EWLi-gBWbJLnMGsjD2EB4aCPYEm9vz2NXssmGj4B-9AJLQ |
| linkToPdf | http://cvtisr.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1LS8NAEB58ISL4FutzBU9iJc1js_FWaqtFDaJVvIXN7sbHIRXbCv57ZzZprRdFvAUySTaZb5JvsrPzARwo6XBS3K5mXBhMUNAXggpsVCp5hASkppVtmX8ZxrF4eIiuy9ocWgtT9IcY_XCjyLDvawpw86qzsShXA5kf10gBfBKmfY7fPlpQ0o5HkwgEgIJE8mroBbzsTkqFPF_HDusQqShS9vC5ZIWgxTfGOc5b7YentfjPIS_BQsk4Wb2AyDJMmHwF5scEEj5W4alzU79vXrbjM9ZpNs5jK5HQvD1h7RwHWvSYHbyZI2bL4_FsN-aR1o4cMZlrhhySXcm-xTKSetbNWFlW12PPObMqfawQJFqDu1az0zivlhoM1RffxZelr1PlpkFgRJCFGbIBNxCRSh2jPaWRbEZppNCrWpiMu5GoISDQ1NdB6gW1LFTeOkzl3dxsAPMk1cQ52nKK0BiBuRI3nsJzYxKbygrsWk8kr0WfjQTzEypTT0igXQSOiwbfXDQydMOIGuw6Fdge-iwpQ7GHuY1Pc8OYqlVgf7Qbg4hmRmRuugOy4Z7jEtn8wQapEfIjHPxvNhFesgKHFgnjN2OTLYJAYiGQNO7qsd3a_IvxHsxen7YShMTFFsy5pM5hl0ZuwxSiwezAjHrvP_fedm0wfAJcygif |
| openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=TRAVELING+TECHNOLOGIES%3A+Infrastructure%2C+Ethical+Regimes%2C+and+the+Materiality+of+Politics+in+South+Africa&rft.jtitle=Cultural+anthropology&rft.au=SCHNITZLER%2C+ANTINA&rft.date=2013-11-01&rft.issn=0886-7356&rft.eissn=1548-1360&rft.volume=28&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=670&rft.epage=693&rft_id=info:doi/10.1111%2Fcuan.12032&rft.externalDBID=10.1111%252Fcuan.12032&rft.externalDocID=CUAN12032 |
| thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0886-7356&client=summon |
| thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0886-7356&client=summon |
| thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0886-7356&client=summon |