The Seabed
Description
Uncovers human histories, cultures, and politics on the ocean floor.
While often characterized as an alien realm, the seabed has long been fundamental to human life. As new technologies offer ever greater access to this environment, the bottom of the ocean is key to debates about our future--and yet we are poorly equipped to understand our relation to it.
The Seabed plumbs the ocean's depths to reveal a rich and complex history of human activity at the seafloor, a history that extends from the classical world to the present. Jimmy Packham and Laurence Publicover highlight the literary significance of the seabed, examining works by writers including Aphra Behn, Anton Chekhov, Euripides, Herman Melville, M. NourbeSe Philip, William Shakespeare, Derek Walcott, and H. G. Wells, as well as lesser-known authors who have imagined this dark and mysterious realm. Putting these in dialogue with the science writing of Rachel Carson, Sylvia Earle, and others, and with visual art, politics, and historical case studies, they show how imaginative speculations concerning the ocean floor have influenced, and continue to inform, human activity on the seabed itself. Through chapters that explore sea burial and seafloor memorials, scientific exploration, deep-sea infrastructure, salvage from the seabed, and deep-sea extraction, the book reveals that the ocean floor's cultural visibility has fluctuated over time. But longstanding visions of the seabed continue to shape our relationship with this place, a site for undersea cables and--in the near future--deep-sea mining.
The bottom of the ocean is closer than we think. Understanding our history there is crucial to assessing the present and imagining our future.
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Persons
Jimmy Packham is a senior lecturer in English Literature at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Gothic Utterance: Voice, Speech, and Death in the American Gothic and Coastal Gothic, 1719-2020 and the coeditor of Our Haunted Shores: Tales from the Coasts of the British Isles. Laurence Publicover is associate professor in literature and oceanic studies at the University of Bristol. He is the author of Dramatic Geography: Romance, Intertheatricality, and Cultural Encounter in Early Modern Mediterranean Drama and Fathoming the Deep in English Renaissance Tragedy: Horror, Mystery, and the Oceanic Sublime and the coeditor of Shipboard Literary Cultures: Reading, Writing, and Performing at Sea.