As Karl Marx insists, it is only when matter is understood to be lifeless that it can be used unconditionally, and without permission, to create profit or property. It is only because we assume that rivers, soils, mountains, and rocks are not animate—let alone divine—that we can even imagine rerouting, poisoning, removing, or fracking them. These sorts of ecological concerns form a good deal of the motivation behind Jane Bennett’s retrieval of materiality as agential, or “vibrant”: “Why advocate the vitality of matter?” she asks. “Because my hunch is that the image of dead or thoroughly instrumentalized matter feeds human hubris and our earth-destroying fantasies of conquest and consumption.”
This is not to say that a living, active matter is necessarily benevolent or eco-friendly; it is simply to say that such matter does things that call into question the ontic dominance of “conscious” animals. Omega-3 actively alters the moods of the earth’s purported hierarchs; trash actively generates gases and reconfigures landscapes; and the multifarious “assemblage” of gunpowder, gun, human volition, and bodily mechanics enables a bullet to hit whatever it hits and kill whomever it kills. Agents marked as natural, cultural, material, immaterial, animal, vegetable, and mineral constantly function in such intermingled assemblages to get everything done that is done; “the electrical grid,” for example, is for Bennett “a volatile mix of coal, sweat, electromagnetic fields, computer programs, electron streams, profit motives, heat, lifestyles, nuclear fuel, plastic, fantasies of mastery, static, legislation, water, economic theory, wire, and wood—to name just some of the actants.” Mel Chen similarly animates the allegedly inanimate in their analyses of environmental toxins, which enter animal and vegetable bodies in a constant “merging of forms of ‘life’ and ‘nonlife.’” Such toxins, they argue, undertake cultural work, as one can detect in the case of lead’s producing a racist panic among white, heterosexist, American parents when it appears in toys manufactured in China. In the work of Bennett, Chen, and other “new materialist” authors, we find a refusal to divide the world into spirit and matter, life and nonlife, or activity and passivity […].
Mary-Jane Rubenstein, Pantheologies: Gods, Worlds, Monsters (2018, p.68)








