Floating Power: Energy, Infrastructure, and South-South Relations
Floating Power: Energy, Infrastructure, and South-South Relations
by Gökçe Günel
Duke University Press, 2026 Cloth: 978-1-4780-3361-5 | Paper: 978-1-4780-3851-1 | eISBN: 978-1-4780-9463-0 (OA) | eISBN: 978-1-4780-6211-0 (standard) Library of Congress Classification HD9502.A2G87 2026
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Floating Power considers the role of energy production on an international scale, challenging the idea that new infrastructures wholly replace older sources of energy. Shifting the discussion from energy transition to energy accumulation, Gökçe Günel engages with a range of electricity producers including hydroelectric, heavy fuel oil, natural gas, and solar power plants, noting their intersections as societies work to expand their supply at large rather than focus on one type of source. Günel uses the Ayşegül Sultan, a Turkish-built floating power plant in Ghana, as a prime example and vehicle to explore how state and corporate intervention impact energy technologies as every nation strives toward infrastructural expansion. Floating Power challenges the linear thinking and substitutive logic of mainstream energy discourse, instead showing how various power sources often expand and grow symbiotically.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Gökçe Günel is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rice University. She is the author of Spaceship in the Desert: Energy, Climate Change, and Urban Design in Abu Dhabi, published by Duke University Press, and co-author of Patchwork Ethnography.
REVIEWS
“This masterful ethnography of Ghana’s floating power plants challenges the very categories through which we apprehend the material world. It dissolves boundaries between the fixed and the flexible, the infrastructural and the ephemeral, the old and the new. In doing so, it reveals the paradoxes of sustaining power amid uncertainty and the deferrals of modernity.”
-- Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, author of More and More and More: An All-Consuming History of Energy
“This quirky-smart book about a floating Turkish ‘powership’ off the West African coast disrupts multiple narratives: teleological stories about energy futures, racist renderings of Africa as ‘always behind,’ ethical-political worries about the intersection of business and politics, methodological fretting about immersive versus patchwork ethnography. A singular and original contribution to scholarship on South-South affiliations and alliances today.”
-- Charles Piot, author of The Fixer: Visa Lottery Chronicles
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Technologies of Deferral 1 1. Cin Fikir 31 2. Liminal Devices 60 3. Leapfrogging to Solar 86 4. Drive Electric 110 Epilogue: A Global Future of Energy 137 Acknowledgments 145 Notes 149 References 163 Index 179
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.