Despite the fact that the sea covers 70 per cent of the Earth's surface, and is integral to the workings of the world, it has been largely neglected or perceived as marginal in modern consciousness. This edited collection disrupts notions of the sea as 'other', as foreign and featureless, through specific, situated accounts which highlight the centrality of the sea for the individuals concerned. Bringing together academics who combine scholarly expertise with lived experiences on, in and with the sea, this book examines humans' relationships with the sea. Through the use of auto-ethnographic accounting, the contributors reflect on how the sea has shaped their sense of identity, belonging and connection. They examine what it is to be engaged...
This paper offers a prospectus for a version of historical geography that puts the seas and oceans a...
One of the most innovative recent interventions in spatial studies has been the shift towards aquati...
In this chapter we will consider how the sea is an inexhaustible source of moments of potential mini...
Despite the fact that the sea covers 70 per cent of the Earth's surface, and is integral to the work...
This presentation is an autobiographical account of my connection with the sea and the associated na...
Our world is a water world. Seventy percent of our planet consists of ocean. However, geography has ...
From the earliest dawning of the human race, communities and groups have turned to the sea. The earl...
International audienceThis book examines how seas and oceans have shaped and reshaped cultural ident...
Book synopsis: This book explores the sea and its meanings from ancient myths to contemporary geopol...
This essay considers seawater as a substance and symbol in anthropological and social theory. Seawat...
This volume brings together historians, anthropologists and literary critics in a common project foc...
Title: The Phenomenon of the Sea - the Sea as Photographed and Described in Selected Art Forms A...
Seventy per cent of the Earth’s surface is sea. Yet, until recently social and cultural geographers ...
This paper is based on the notion that the sea is a knowable, textured place that through senses, ob...
The research sought to collaboratively lay the foundations of an academic understanding of how the o...
This paper offers a prospectus for a version of historical geography that puts the seas and oceans a...
One of the most innovative recent interventions in spatial studies has been the shift towards aquati...
In this chapter we will consider how the sea is an inexhaustible source of moments of potential mini...
Despite the fact that the sea covers 70 per cent of the Earth's surface, and is integral to the work...
This presentation is an autobiographical account of my connection with the sea and the associated na...
Our world is a water world. Seventy percent of our planet consists of ocean. However, geography has ...
From the earliest dawning of the human race, communities and groups have turned to the sea. The earl...
International audienceThis book examines how seas and oceans have shaped and reshaped cultural ident...
Book synopsis: This book explores the sea and its meanings from ancient myths to contemporary geopol...
This essay considers seawater as a substance and symbol in anthropological and social theory. Seawat...
This volume brings together historians, anthropologists and literary critics in a common project foc...
Title: The Phenomenon of the Sea - the Sea as Photographed and Described in Selected Art Forms A...
Seventy per cent of the Earth’s surface is sea. Yet, until recently social and cultural geographers ...
This paper is based on the notion that the sea is a knowable, textured place that through senses, ob...
The research sought to collaboratively lay the foundations of an academic understanding of how the o...
This paper offers a prospectus for a version of historical geography that puts the seas and oceans a...
One of the most innovative recent interventions in spatial studies has been the shift towards aquati...
In this chapter we will consider how the sea is an inexhaustible source of moments of potential mini...