Author Archives: Jackie Ashkin

Jackie Ashkin is a scholar of science, technology, and the environment based in the Netherlands. Her research focuses on the politics of knowing and adapting to (coastal) ocean futures. She draws on the material properties of ocean water to better understand scientific knowledge practices and infrastructures, engage with the world-making role of technology, and examine the limits of neoliberal environmental governance. Through her work, Jackie seeks to rethink Eurocentric and colonial imaginations of environmental crisis that in turn shape what futures are within reach.
An artificial embankment of black tarpaulin stretches across the image, against an arid gray landscape. The water level is low and white streaks are visible on against the black tarpaulin.

Salt: A Provocation

Salt. That everyday thing we use to season our meals, relax our muscles, or make our icy roadways safer to traverse. Salt is an inescapable part of human experience, and yet, as anthropologists, it often escapes our attention. In recent years, anthropologists have turned their attention to what Cymene Howe (2026) calls the ‘elemental’, referring to the objects and processes – often simultaneously both – that constitute the world. Ongoing environmental crisis means coming to experience the elemental in new ways, both within and around the body. Salt, or sodium chloride, is one of these elements. (read more...)