9781517900472-1517900476-For All Waters: Finding Ourselves in Early Modern Wetscapes

For All Waters: Finding Ourselves in Early Modern Wetscapes

ISBN-13: 9781517900472
ISBN-10: 1517900476
Edition: 1
Author: Lowell Duckert
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Format: Paperback 334 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781517900472
ISBN-10: 1517900476
Edition: 1
Author: Lowell Duckert
Publication date: 2017
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Format: Paperback 334 pages

Summary

For All Waters: Finding Ourselves in Early Modern Wetscapes (ISBN-13: 9781517900472 and ISBN-10: 1517900476), written by authors Lowell Duckert, was published by University of Minnesota Press in 2017. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other Human Geography (Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent For All Waters: Finding Ourselves in Early Modern Wetscapes (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Human Geography books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Recent years have witnessed a surge in early modern ecostudies, many devoted to Shakespearean drama. Yet in this burgeoning discipline, travel writing appears moored in historicization, inorganic subjects are far less prevalent than organic ones, and freshwater sites are hardly visited. For All Waters explores these uncharted wetscapes.

Lowell Duckert shows that when playwrights and travel writers such as Sir Walter Raleigh physically interacted with rivers, glaciers, monsoons, and swamps, they composed “hydrographies,” or bodily and textual assemblages of human and nonhuman things that dissolved notions of human autonomy and its singular narrativity. With a playful, punning touch woven deftly into its theoretical rigor, For All Waters disputes fantasies of ecological solitude that would keep our selves high and dry and that would try to sustain a political ecology excluding water and the poor. The lives of both humans and waterscapes can be improved simultaneously through direct engagement with wetness.

For All Waters concludes by investigating waterscapes in peril today—West Virginia’s chemical rivers and Iceland’s vanishing glaciers—and outlining what we can learn from early moderns’ eco-ontological lessons. By taking their soggy and storied matters to heart, and arriving at a greater realization of our shared wetness, we can conceive new directions to take within the hydropolitical crises afflicting us today.

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