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University of California Press

About the Book

In this exquisitely crafted ethnography Charline Kopf examines how and why railway workers in Senegal and Mali care for a suspended railway. Trains rarely run yet men continue to sweep floors repair wagons and gather in stations everyday practices that keep the railway alive as a social and political space. The railway has become an afterplace—a worksite in a post-labor context where infrastructure no longer fully functional still organizes memory politics and collective life. Generations meet here with different temporal horizons: older workers recall futures once promised through stable employment and national ambition while younger and often precariously employed men confront futures never secured. These tensions raise urgent questions about what remains when work recedes along with the possibilities it once carried. Tracing connections and fractures across Senegal and Mali the book offers a new lens on the afterlives of transnational infrastructure in Africa and beyond.

About the Author

Charline Kopf is Postdoctoral Fellow of Anthropology at the University of Oslo. 

Table of Contents

Contents


List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations


Introduction: Mobility Memory and Maintenance


Part I: Dakar-Thiès
1. Suspension: Walled in by Émergence
2. Solidarity: Rail Without Borders
3. Repair: Holding Decay at Bay
4. Remembrance: Nostalgia and Cosmopolitan Careers


Stopover: The High Line


Part II: Kidira-Bamako
5. Maintenance: Caring When Everything Derails
6. Reconnections: Spectacles Speculations and Protests


Stopover: The Monument


Conclusion: Next Stop?


Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
 

Reviews

Afterplace offers a nuanced and powerful rethinking of infrastructure not as fully functional nor as failing/failed or museumified ruin but as suspended—inhabited cared for and contested and kept alive by those who refuse to let it be forgotten.”—Katie Kilroy-Marac author of An Impossible Inheritance: Postcolonial Psychiatry and the Work of Memory in a West African Clinic

“In this engaging and poetic ethnography Charline Kopf offers a major rethinking of postcolonial infrastructure through the analytic of the afterplace and shows how sites of apparent obsolescence remain vital arenas of labor and social life. By foregrounding 'temporal labor,' the book makes a powerful contribution that challenges linear notions of work and political action.”—Julie Kleinman Associate Professor of Anthropology Fordham University “With eloquent prose and clear writing Charline Kopf tells a devastating story of a dream deferred and the efforts to maintain dwindling future possibilities that sustain it.”—Bettina Ng’weno author of No Place Like Home in a New City: Anti-Urbanism and Life in Nairobi