This article interrogates the Amsterdam Plaskrul (pee curl) not merely as a functional amenity, but as a material archive of ontological sorting. Departing from the critiques of gendered exclusion, this study reads the pee curl as a philosophically generative case study through an infrastructural thick description that interprets design as a material text to argue that the pee curl’s promise of welfare inclusion is undercut by the very conditions of its provision. The analysis proceeds through three layers. First, a spatial analysis reveals how the pee curl’s design prioritizes urban circulation over inhabitation, offering inclusion only by reducing the subject to a unit of biological throughput. Second, an ontological inquiry shows that the removal of privacy strips the user of political subjecthood, re-enacting the colonial distinction between “Human” and “Animal”. Third, an affective analysis examines how the infrastructure functions as a technology of micro-discipline by offering relief while withholding the conditions necessary for dignity. Ultimately, the article contends that the pee curl operates as an infrastructural script that does not simply fail to provide care but successfully stages a hierarchy of being.
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Umut Mişe
Space and Culture
Boğaziçi University
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Umut Mişe (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8970c6c1944d70ce084fc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/12063312261435774
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