Description
Book SynopsisAround 2004, members of governmental and nongovernmental organizations, science institutes, and private companies throughout India began brainstorming and then experimenting with small-scale treatment systems that could produce usable water from wastewater. Through detailed case studies, Microbial Machines describes how residents, workers, and scientists interact with technology, science, and engineering during the processes of treatment and reuse. Using a human-machine-microbe framework, Kelly Alley explores the ways that people's sensory perceptions of waterincluding disgustare dynamic and how people use machines and microbes to digest wastewater. A better understanding of how the human and nonhuman interact in these processes will enable people to generate more effective methods for treating and reusing wastewater. While decentralized wastewater treatment systems may not be a perfect solution, they alleviate resource stress in regions that are particularly hard hit by climate change
Table of ContentsContents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction
1. Sanitation and Institutional Complexity
2. Inventing Bioreactors
3. Double Burdens
4. Horticultural, Partial, and Off-Grid Reuse
5. Closed Loops and Emerging Reuse
6. Pretend Machines
7. Conclusions
Glossary
Notes
References
Index