University Seminar on the Theory and History of Media
ISERP
Eastern Congolese artisanal miners of the “digital minerals” that make technology possible understand that their actions and practices are being observed by and broadcast to others around the world in ways that they don’t control, and which ultimately distort reality and take power and autonomy away from them. NGOs and media outlets mobilize imagery (photos, film) that is used to drive them out of the sites that they discovered, which industrial mining companies go on to usurp. Satellites watch their movements and transmit news of their most banal conflicts to state officials—not to protect them, but to ensure that the minerals that go into electronics are “free of blood” so that the consumers of iPhones will feel comfortable touching them. And new regulations and digitized tracking schemes—themselves the outcome of media spectacle surrounding blood minerals—have placed them at risk of expropriation by Congolese state officials, as minerals from unvalidated mines are now often understood to be “bloody” even if they come from conflict free mines. While there are things that are new about these forms of surveillance, those involved in the mineral trade tend to see them as aspect of a long term regime: at least since the time of King Leopold, outsiders have been using techniques of surveillance (record keeping, mapmaking, and now satellites and cameras that see under the ground) to know and control Congolese earth and resources better than Congolese, and to exploit that knowledge for their own profit. Yet, at the same time as eyes of the world work to control Congolese earth and forest at the expense of Congolese, diggers also have access to their own media (including techniques for communicating with ancestors, who are ultimately responses for the release of minerals to the world system), which they use to avoid, circumvent, or elicit truths that remain invisible to the Eyes of the World.
James H. Smith is Professor of Socio-Cultural Anthropology and, since 2021, Chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of California (Davis). He is the author of The Eyes of the World: Mining the Digital Age in the Eastern Congo (University of Chicago Press), which won the Elliott P. Skinner Prize for Africanist Anthropology (2022), the Association for Political Anthropology “Critical Anthropology” Book Prize (2022) and the Society for the Anthropology of Work Book Prize (2023). He is also the author of Bewitching Development: Witchcraft and the Reinvention of Development in Neoliberal Kenya (University of Chicago Press), which explores vernacular understandings and critiques of “development” and their relationship to local theories of “witchcraft.” He is co-author of the collaborative memoir and ethnography Email from Ngeti (University of California Press) and co-editor of Displacing the State: Religion and Conflict in Neoliberal Africa (University of Notre Dame Press). Smith is the recipient of numerous grants and fellowships and has published articles in many peer reviewed journals, including American Ethnologist, Ethnography, Comparative Studies in Society and History, and the Journal of Religion in Africa. His research concerns many aspects of everyday life in postcolonial Africa, with specific topics including "development" and vernacular development and peace-building narratives and practices in Africa; artisanal mining and digital minerals resource extraction, especially in Eastern Congo; “blood minerals” auditing schemes; human-wildlife conflicts and climate change in Africa, especially in Kenya and Eastern Congo; and Temporal Politics in Colonial and Postcolonial Africa. He received his PhD in Anthropology from the University of Chicago in 2002.
Image credit: Sylvain Liechti/MONUSCO
