4.2 Article

From Obsolescence to Abandonment: Exploring the Precarious Use of Cochlear Implants in India

Journal

SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY & HUMAN VALUES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01622439231211099

Keywords

abandonment; obsolescence; deafness; biotechnology; use; disability

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This article analyzes the aftermath of a government program in India that provides cochlear implants to children living below the poverty line. It highlights the financial and logistical struggles faced by families in maintaining the devices and emphasizes the need to reframe the concept of abandonment, focusing on how families are abandoned by the state and corporations. The article argues that the concept of obsolescence obscures the relational aspect and functions in a politically neutral way.
Cochlear implants are considered the gold standard in intervening on deafness and hearing loss. However, success is predicated upon routine and consistent use, which in turn is predicated on the ability to maintain devices. This essay considers what happens when use is partial and precarious and asks what happens when external implant processors become obsolete. Contributing to Science and Technology Studies scholarship on obsolescence and the binary between use and nonuse, I analyzes the ongoing aftermath of a central government program in India that provides children living below the poverty line with cochlear implants. Drawing on ethnography and interviews, the article analyzes how families struggle financially and logistically to maintain devices, resulting in cycles of partial use and precarious use. Ultimately, devices become obsolete, and families cannot afford compulsory upgrades. The state and corporations claim these families abandon the devices. In contrast to this claim, the article stresses that we must examine abandonment differently, by attending to how families are abandoned by the state and corporations. Arguing that obsolescence as a concept obscures relationality and functions apolitically, the concept of abandonment is instead put forward to analyze ruptures that occur when consistent and reliable biotechnology use is no longer possible.

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