A critical reading of the unstable structures that organize biological and social life This timely and radically interdisciplinary volume uncovers the aesthetics and politics of infrastructure. From roads and bridges to harbors and canals, infrastructure is conventionally understood as the public works that allow for the circulation of capital. Yet this naturalized concept of infrastructure, driven by capital’s restless expansion, is haunted by imperial tendencies to occupy territory, extract resources, and organize life. Infrastructure thus undergirds the living nexus of modernity in an ongoing project of racialization, affective embodiment, and environmental praxis. Rather than merely making visible infrastructure’s modes of power, however, The Aesthetic Life of Infrastructure brings literary methods to bear on the interpretive terrain, reading infrastructural space and temporalities to show that their aesthetic and sensorial experience cannot be understood apart from histories of production and political economies. Building on critical infrastructure studies in anthropology, geography, and media studies, this collection demonstrates the field’s vitality to scholars working across the humanities, including in literary, visual, and cultural studies. By querying the presumed invisibility of infrastructure’s hidden life, the volume’s contributors revitalize ongoing literary debates about reading surface and depth. How, they ask, might infrastructure and aesthetics then function as epistemic tools for rethinking each other? And what urgency do they acquire in light of current crises that bear on death, whether biological, social, or planetary? “A timely contribution to the burgeoning “infrastructural turn” within literary studies. The Aesthetic Life of Infrastructure ’s approach to the intersection of literary and infrastructural studies centers unwaveringly upon material realities. In a departure from other recent works of literary-infrastructural analysis . . . the editors and contributors are not interested in formalism as a literary corollary to infrastructure. The Aesthetic Life of Infrastructure strives to avoid this pitfall through a rigorous interdisciplinarity, one that takes seriously a long-standing set of infrastructural questions and methodologies within disciplines like anthropology and sociology.” ― Modern Philology “ The Aesthetic Life of Infrastructure is a timely, significant collection addressing one of the central issues of the contemporary moment. It offers a refreshing and urgent contribution to the growing body of work in the humanities on infrastructures, addressing how infrastructures mean on multiple levels, and how they not only impact but are interpreted by culture.” ―Kate Marshall, author of Corridor: Media Architectures in American Fiction “A dazzling set of essays on infrastructure.” —Angela Naimou, author of Salvage Work: U.S. and Caribbean Literatures amid the Debris of Legal Personhood KELLY MEE RICH is an associate professor of English at Harvard University. NICOLE M. RIZZUTO is an associate professor of English at Georgetown University. She is the author of Insurgent Testimonies: Witnessing Colonial Trauma in Modern and Anglophone Literature . SUSAN ZIEGER is a professor of English at the University of California, Riverside. She is the author of Inventing the Addict: Drugs, Race, and Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century British and American Literature and The Mediated Mind: Affect, Ephemera, and Consumerism in the Nineteenth Century.