Description

Book Synopsis

Contemporary public discourses about the ocean are routinely characterized by scientific and environmentalist narratives that imagine and idealize marine spaces in which humans are absent. In contrast, this collection explores the variety of ways in which people have long made themselves at home at sea, and continue to live intimately with it. In doing so, it brings together both ethnographic and archaeological research – much of it with an explicit Ingoldian approach – on a wide range of geographical areas and historical periods.



Trade Review

“All papers within the volume show a sensitivity to ongoing problems of the malleability of the physical boundaries where coastal people (sensu latto) and the potential dangers arising from describing coastal livelihoods and (especially) places as unproductive…At Home on the Waves is a valuable resource for anyone interested in coastal livelihoods, environmental knowledge, and community engagement.” • Ethnobiology Letters

“The wide and diversified scope of this publication is as inspiring as it is thought-provoking, and this is certainly one of its major strengths… a book of interesting cases to illustrate the seemingly endless variability and nuances of human-sea relations that I do not hesitate to recommend, a bouquet of eye-opening reflections on the vast complexity of what the wet realm is in the world for terrestrial human beings.” • Norwegian Archaeological Review

At Home on the Waves sets out what it aims to do and contributes to the overarching theme of the centrality of marine environments to people around the world. Those researching the topic will appreciate the numerous examples from anthropological and archaeological perspectives and the range of geographical locations…that render the book worth reading.” • Maritime Archaeology

“A very ambitious project which engages critically with a timely topic… It crucially brings to the fore the voices and ways of life of those often marginalized or otherwise left out.” • Fiona McCormack, University of Waikato

“Interdisciplinary research is all the rage, but rarely does one find a single volume that manages to weave such varied perspectives and approaches into a fascinating whole.” • Madeleine Hall-Arber, Massachusetts Institute of Technology



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
List of Tables

Foreword
Bonnie McCay

Acknowledgments

Introduction: At Sea in the Twenty-First Century
Tanya J. King and Gary Robinson

Chapter 1. Moving Beyond the “Scape” to Being in the (Watery) World, Wherever
Hannah Cobb and Jesse Ransley

Chapter 2. Working Grounds, Producing Places, and Becoming at Home at Sea
Penny McCall Howard

Chapter 3. Reexamination Brazilian Mounds: Changed Views of Coastal Societies
Daniela Klokler and MaDu Gaspar

Chapter 4. Seamless Archaeology: The Evolving Use of Archaeology in the Study of Seascapes
Caroline Wickham-Jones

Chapter 5. Moving Along: Wayfinding, Following, and Nonverbal Communication across the Frozen Seascape of East Greenland
Sophie Cäcilie Elixhauser

Chapter 6. Drawing Gestures: Body Movement in Perceiving and Communicating Submerged Landscapes
Cristián Simonetti

Chapter 7. Exploration of a Buried Seascape: The Cultural Maritime Landscapes of Tremadoc Bay
Gary Robinson

Chapter 8. Fish Traps of the Crocodile Islands: Windows on Another World
Bentley James

Chapter 9. A Community-Based Approach to Documenting and Interpreting the Cultural Seascapes of the Recherche Archipelago, Western Australia
David Guilfoyle, Ross Anderson, Ron “Doc” Reynolds, and Tom Kimber

Chapter 10. Recognized Seaworthy: Resistance and Transformation among Icelandic Fisherwomen
Margaret Willson and Helga Tryggvadóttir

Chapter 11. “It Is Windier Nowadays”: Coastal Livelihoods and Seascape-Making in Qeqertarsuaq, West Greenland
Pelle Tejsner

Chapter 12. Home-Making on Land and Sea in the Archipelagic Philippines
Olivia Swift

Chapter 13. Fishing for Food and Fun: How Fishing Practices Mediate Physical and Discursive Relationships with the Sea in Carteret County, North Carolina, US
Noëlle Boucquey and Lisa Campbell

Chapter 14. Sea Nomads: Sama-Bajau Mobility, Livelihoods, and Marine Conservation in Southeast Asia
Natasha Stacey and Edward H. Allison

Chapter 15. Formal and Informal Territoriality in Ocean Management
Tanya J. King

Afterword: At Home on the Waves? A Concluding Comment
Tim Ingold

Glossary
Index

At Home on the Waves: Human Habitation of the Sea

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A Hardback by Tanya J. King, Gary Robinson

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    View other formats and editions of At Home on the Waves: Human Habitation of the Sea by Tanya J. King

    Publisher: Berghahn Books
    Publication Date: 18/02/2019
    ISBN13: 9781789201420, 978-1789201420
    ISBN10: 178920142X

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Contemporary public discourses about the ocean are routinely characterized by scientific and environmentalist narratives that imagine and idealize marine spaces in which humans are absent. In contrast, this collection explores the variety of ways in which people have long made themselves at home at sea, and continue to live intimately with it. In doing so, it brings together both ethnographic and archaeological research – much of it with an explicit Ingoldian approach – on a wide range of geographical areas and historical periods.



    Trade Review

    “All papers within the volume show a sensitivity to ongoing problems of the malleability of the physical boundaries where coastal people (sensu latto) and the potential dangers arising from describing coastal livelihoods and (especially) places as unproductive…At Home on the Waves is a valuable resource for anyone interested in coastal livelihoods, environmental knowledge, and community engagement.” • Ethnobiology Letters

    “The wide and diversified scope of this publication is as inspiring as it is thought-provoking, and this is certainly one of its major strengths… a book of interesting cases to illustrate the seemingly endless variability and nuances of human-sea relations that I do not hesitate to recommend, a bouquet of eye-opening reflections on the vast complexity of what the wet realm is in the world for terrestrial human beings.” • Norwegian Archaeological Review

    At Home on the Waves sets out what it aims to do and contributes to the overarching theme of the centrality of marine environments to people around the world. Those researching the topic will appreciate the numerous examples from anthropological and archaeological perspectives and the range of geographical locations…that render the book worth reading.” • Maritime Archaeology

    “A very ambitious project which engages critically with a timely topic… It crucially brings to the fore the voices and ways of life of those often marginalized or otherwise left out.” • Fiona McCormack, University of Waikato

    “Interdisciplinary research is all the rage, but rarely does one find a single volume that manages to weave such varied perspectives and approaches into a fascinating whole.” • Madeleine Hall-Arber, Massachusetts Institute of Technology



    Table of Contents

    List of Illustrations
    List of Tables

    Foreword
    Bonnie McCay

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: At Sea in the Twenty-First Century
    Tanya J. King and Gary Robinson

    Chapter 1. Moving Beyond the “Scape” to Being in the (Watery) World, Wherever
    Hannah Cobb and Jesse Ransley

    Chapter 2. Working Grounds, Producing Places, and Becoming at Home at Sea
    Penny McCall Howard

    Chapter 3. Reexamination Brazilian Mounds: Changed Views of Coastal Societies
    Daniela Klokler and MaDu Gaspar

    Chapter 4. Seamless Archaeology: The Evolving Use of Archaeology in the Study of Seascapes
    Caroline Wickham-Jones

    Chapter 5. Moving Along: Wayfinding, Following, and Nonverbal Communication across the Frozen Seascape of East Greenland
    Sophie Cäcilie Elixhauser

    Chapter 6. Drawing Gestures: Body Movement in Perceiving and Communicating Submerged Landscapes
    Cristián Simonetti

    Chapter 7. Exploration of a Buried Seascape: The Cultural Maritime Landscapes of Tremadoc Bay
    Gary Robinson

    Chapter 8. Fish Traps of the Crocodile Islands: Windows on Another World
    Bentley James

    Chapter 9. A Community-Based Approach to Documenting and Interpreting the Cultural Seascapes of the Recherche Archipelago, Western Australia
    David Guilfoyle, Ross Anderson, Ron “Doc” Reynolds, and Tom Kimber

    Chapter 10. Recognized Seaworthy: Resistance and Transformation among Icelandic Fisherwomen
    Margaret Willson and Helga Tryggvadóttir

    Chapter 11. “It Is Windier Nowadays”: Coastal Livelihoods and Seascape-Making in Qeqertarsuaq, West Greenland
    Pelle Tejsner

    Chapter 12. Home-Making on Land and Sea in the Archipelagic Philippines
    Olivia Swift

    Chapter 13. Fishing for Food and Fun: How Fishing Practices Mediate Physical and Discursive Relationships with the Sea in Carteret County, North Carolina, US
    Noëlle Boucquey and Lisa Campbell

    Chapter 14. Sea Nomads: Sama-Bajau Mobility, Livelihoods, and Marine Conservation in Southeast Asia
    Natasha Stacey and Edward H. Allison

    Chapter 15. Formal and Informal Territoriality in Ocean Management
    Tanya J. King

    Afterword: At Home on the Waves? A Concluding Comment
    Tim Ingold

    Glossary
    Index

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