Repair/Maintenance: Politics of (In)completeness Graduate Student Symposium
May 1, 2026
9:00 am
Kahin Center
Our world is in dire need of repair. From collapsing infrastructures and ecological devastation to fraying democratic institutions and longue durée effects of colonial violence, the language of repair has become ubiquitous to our understanding of continuity and change. Particularly in South Asia—where accelerating crises of neoliberal capitalism intersect with totalizing forms of political power—projects of repair are everywhere. Scholars writing about repair have invited us to consider repair as an ongoing work by which infrastructures are “earned and re-earned” (Jackson 2015) through everyday care, maintenance, and intervention, while they accrete in formations comprising multiple temporalities, histories, and political rationalities (Anand 2015). Infrastructures, by their nature of incompleteness and uneven accretions of social–material relations, constantly call forth projects of maintenance and repair. But what does it mean to repair? Who repairs, under what conditions, and to what ends?
We invite proposals from students at Cornell University, Syracuse University, and University of Rochester for a one-day graduate workshop, organized by the Cornell South Asia Program, to think with repair as an analytic that cuts across social science and humanistic inquiry. We approach repair not simply as a technical solution to breakdown, but as a material and discursive practice deeply embedded in political economy, historical accountability, and struggles over democracy and equality. Thinking expansively, this workshop aims to understand repair as operating across multiple scales and registers. Repair speaks to material concerns—roads, embankments, housing, energy systems, ecosystems—but also to discursive and institutional domains such as postcolonial reckoning and reparation. Repair may signal continuity and stabilization, reproducing existing arrangements under the guise of maintenance. At other moments, it may open possibilities for rupture or refusal. Attending to repair foregrounds the labor, affect, and politics involved in keeping things going, asking when repair may foreground or foreclose certain kinds of prefigurative politics. The workshop aims to create an interdisciplinary space for collective thinking and feedback, welcoming work at all stages—from early conceptual explorations to advanced drafts. Beyond the single-day event, we hope this gathering will foster an ongoing conversation about how repair, as both practice and analytic, can help us critically apprehend contemporary crises and imagine more just futures in and beyond South Asia.
Symposium Schedule
9:00-9:05 Welcome
Sarah Besky (Global Labor and Work, Cornell University)
9:05-10:45 Panel 1: Labor, Environment, and the Politics of (Re)Production
Fruit King, Super Fast: The Politics and Labor of Perishability in Himachal's Apple Economy
Parijat Jha (Anthropology, Cornell University)
Hydromodernity at Her Expense: Gendered Labor and the Politics of Environmental Decline at Manchar Lake
Sarah Hussain (History, Tufts University)
Making Place, Making Livelihood: Ethnic Enclaves as Resistance
Zanaya Hussain (Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University)
Strengthening Food Transfers for Maternal Health and Nutrition: Evidence from Rural India
Sumedha Minocha (Applied Economics & Management, Cornell University)
Chair/Discussant: Ashawari Chaudhuri (Science & Technology Studies, Cornell University)
11:00-12:15 Panel 2: State Repair: Technology, Law, and Governance
“Maintenance is our middle name”: Computer Repair Expertise and the Indian State, 1975-91
Jai Vipra (Science & Technology Studies, Cornell University)
“Broken Laws” - India’s Reckoning and Repair of Colonial-Era Legal Statutes
Mohona Ganguly (Public Administration, Syracuse University)
Repairing Indian Education System: Can AI Help in this Process?
Deepak Dennison (Information Science, Cornell University)
Chair/Discussant: Sarah Thompson (Government, Cornell University)
1:15-2:30 Panel 3: Memory, Space, and the Politics of Restoration
Mythological Repair: Babri Demolition, Sacred Labor, and the Architecture of Hindutva
Sara Ather (Architecture, Cornell University)
Tiptoeing Histories: Recuperating the Bagh as a Bagh
Yakin Kinger (Architecture, Cornell University)
Repairing the Colonial Archive: Francis Buchanan-Hamilton’s Botanical Illustrations and the Making of Imperial Knowledge in Nepal
Praagya Khand (Art and Music Histories, Syracuse University)
Chair/Discussant: Ayesha Matthan (History of Art, Cornell University)
This symposium is supported by a grant from the Central New York Humanities Corridor.
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
South Asia Program