
Ethnographic Imagination Basel On Extractivism - with Mark Goodale
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Oct 15, 2025 Mark Goodale, a Professor of Cultural and Social Anthropology at the University of Lausanne, dives into the world of extractivism and lithium in Bolivia. He discusses the political economy tied to raw materials and how extractive practices shape futures. Goodale explores the complex interplay between green energy aspirations, local impacts, and historical patterns in Bolivian extractivism. He emphasizes the importance of ethnography in understanding community narratives amid a lithium rush, raising questions about who truly benefits from these global shifts.
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Extraction As A Face Of Capitalism
- Extractivism links the extraction of raw materials to capitalist expansion and global circuits of power.
- Mark Goodale argues extractivism is a violent but enduring face of capitalism shaping economies and geopolitics.
Becoming Obsessed With Lithium
- Goodale recounts unexpectedly becoming absorbed in lithium research despite no prior chemistry background.
- He learned enough geology and chemistry to ethnographically study Bolivia's lithium potential and even joked he was dreaming about lithium.
Repeatable Promises Through Different Commodities
- Bolivia's resource history shows successive raw materials carried promises of transformative futures.
- Goodale traces silver, guano, rubber, tin, gas and now lithium as repeating extractive imaginaries.









