“Storied Seas and Living Metaphors in the Blue Humanities”
Citation
Oppermann, Serpil. “Storied Seas and Living Metaphors in the Blue Humanities.” Configurations 27.4 (Special issue on “Science Studies and the Blue Humanities,” guest edited by Stacy Alaimo (Fall 2019): 443-461.Abstract
ABSTRACT: This article investigates the terraqueous entanglements of
human and marine life in material and discursive contexts through
an aquatic practice of material ecocritical theory. Material ecocriticism
encourages us to read the ecology of the planet’s protean seas by way
of their storied dimension, and to think the blue humanities and the
discoveries of marine sciences through one another, in creative ways.
In this context, two interlinked questions surface. 1. How do we theorize the seascapes whose materiality is hydrous without obfuscating
its reality in figurative conceptualizing? 2. If our knowledge of the
sea depends on how it is represented, and interpreted, will the sea’s
biogeophysical existence cease to exist? I argue that the meanings of
the sea always remain in the interstice between the discursive and the
real, and that the experience of the sea gains meaning only in their
corollary dynamics.
Source
ConfigurationsVolume
27Issue
4URI
https://muse.jhu.edu/article/735221/pdfhttps://apps.webofknowledge.com/InboundService.do?product=WOS&Func=Frame&DestFail=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.webofknowledge.com&SrcApp=RRC&locale=en_US&SrcAuth=RRC&SID=E1KpgMZ7JuwwKQStKx2&customersID=RRC&mode=FullRecord&IsProductCode=Yes&Init=Yes&action=retrieve&UT=WOS%3A000489556000003
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12695/493