Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters











Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Am Anthropol ; 113(1): 132-44, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21560270

ABSTRACT

Seawater has occupied an ambiguous place in anthropological categories of "nature" and "culture." Seawater as nature appears as potentiality of form and uncontainable flux; it moves faster than culture - with culture frequently figured through land-based metaphors - even as culture seeks to channel water's (nature's) flow. Seawater as culture manifests as a medium of pleasure, sustenance, travel, disaster. I argue that, although seawater's qualities in early anthropology were portrayed impressionistically, today technical, scientific descriptions of water's form prevail. For example, processes of globalization - which may also be called "oceanization" - are often described as "currents," "flows," and "circulations." Examining sea-set ethnography, maritime anthropologies, and contemporary social theory, I propose that seawater has operated as a "theory machine" for generating insights about human cultural organization. I develop this argument with ethnography from the Sargasso Sea and in the Sea Islands. I conclude with a critique of appeals to water's form in social theory.


Subject(s)
Anthropology , Culture , Nature , Seawater , Sociology , Symbolism , Anthropology/education , Anthropology/history , Atlantic Ocean/ethnology , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Seaweed , Sociology/education , Sociology/history , West Indies/ethnology
3.
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL