In this Book

summary

How fluorescent orange symbolizes the uneven distribution of safety and risk in the neoliberal United States 
 

Safety Orange first emerged in the 1950s as a bureaucratic color standard in technical manuals and federal regulations in the United States. Today it is most visible in the contexts of terror, pandemic, and environmental alarm systems; traffic control; work safety; and mass incarceration. In recent decades, the color has become ubiquitous in American public life—a marker of the extreme poles of state oversight and abandonment, of capitalist excess and dereliction. Its unprecedented saturation encodes the tracking of those bodies, neighborhoods, and infrastructures judged as worthy of care—and those deemed dangerous and expendable. 

Here, Anna Watkins Fisher uses Safety Orange as an interpretive key for theorizing the uneven distribution of safety and care in twenty-first-century U.S. public life and for pondering what the color tells us about neoliberalism’s intensifying impact often hiding in plain sight in ordinary and commonplace phenomena. 

Forerunners: Ideas First is a thought-in-process series of breakthrough digital publications. Written between fresh ideas and finished books, Forerunners draws on scholarly work initiated in notable blogs, social media, conference plenaries, journal articles, and the synergy of academic exchange. This is gray literature publishing: where intense thinking, change, and speculation take place in scholarship.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title

pp. i

Series Page

pp. ii-iv

Title Page

pp. v

Copyright Page

pp. vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Introduction: Ordinary Life on High Alert

pp. ix-xx

1. Orange You Glad You Live in America: The United States of Perpetual Risk

pp. 1-12

2. Orange beyond Orange: Normalizing Catastrophe in Public Risk Communication

pp. 13-28

3. An Infrastructural Band-Aid: Outsourcing State Accountability

pp. 29-36

4. Orange Is the New Profiling Technology

pp. 37-46

5. Orange Applied: Artistic Appropriations

pp. 47-62

Conclusion: Seeing Red

pp. 63-64

Acknowledgments

pp. 65-66

Notes

Bibliography

pp. 67-75

About the Author

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