2014
DOI: 10.1177/1359183514560284
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Infrastructure turned suprastructure: Unpredictable materialities and visions of a Nigerian nation

Abstract: There are signs hidden in the infrastructure. In the Nigerian city of Jos, the unpredictable availability of power, fuel, water, etc. becomes a vehicle of meaning. In many settings across the globe, infrastructure is often made invisible, and the centre stage that it takes in everyday life remains unrecognized. In Jos, however, as in many African cities, the constant need to predict its flows contradicts the prefix infra (below); rather than being hidden beneath the realm of experience it is brought to the sur… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…In Jos, as in Nigeria at large, people look back upon the early days of independence in 1960 as a golden age when there was water in all the lines and electricity was constant (Trovalla and Trovalla, 2015). During the oil boom of the 1970s, massive investments were made in the infrastructure.…”
Section: Divining a Re-wired Modernitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Jos, as in Nigeria at large, people look back upon the early days of independence in 1960 as a golden age when there was water in all the lines and electricity was constant (Trovalla and Trovalla, 2015). During the oil boom of the 1970s, massive investments were made in the infrastructure.…”
Section: Divining a Re-wired Modernitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, mobile phones as state infrastructures (also) reveal ‘interrupted futures’ (Trovalla and Trovalla, : 48). They reaffirm what appears to be a state inability to provide basic services to its citizens, to fulfil the basic entitlements that Cox (: 965) argues are foundational for an ‘ethos of citizenship’ to develop in contemporary Solomon Islands.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mobile phones are then also ‘suprastructures’, structures that are ‘above and visible’ (supra) in the possible disruptions that they cause. They ‘[transcend] the realm of mere utility, signifying the unpredictable and elusive essence of [Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea]’ (Trovalla and Trovalla, : 54).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Infrastructures that have already been built but that are regularly not working, such as Solomon Islands' roads, prevent this shift in perspective and require a more concise understanding of the politics that surround both disrepair and maintenance efforts. While, as Barnes (2017) notes, much existing research on maintenance has focused on teasing out and, to some degree, celebrating the (invisible) contributions of maintenance workers, a growing body of literature points to the importance of examining the politics of maintenance and disrepair, their transformative potential and their entanglement with broader social and political struggles (see Smith 2016;Trovalla and Trovalla 2015). This research asks "who decides what is to be maintained and how is it to be maintained?"…”
Section: The Temporality Of Infrastructure Maintenancementioning
confidence: 99%