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Rory Dufficy reviews 'The Ethics of Waste' by Gay Hawkins

by
July-August 2009, no. 313

The Ethics of Waste: How we relate to rubbish by Gay Hawkins

UNSW Press, $34.95 pb, 151 pp

Rory Dufficy reviews 'The Ethics of Waste' by Gay Hawkins

by
July-August 2009, no. 313

There are few times we use words related to what we throw away in any sort of positive manner; if, for example, this weren’t a nuanced, careful book, I might call it trash. Certainly, one might refer to, say, a crime novel or a Jerry Bruckheimer film as ‘trash’, but mean it with love and affection, and ‘wasted’ or ‘trashed’ are words used with affection and some pride by people when referring to drug-fuelled exploits. In general, though, we use such words – trash, junk, garbage, waste, rubbish – in a pejorative sense, and it is this sense of waste that Hawkins wants to challenge and complicate in this brief study.

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