Contemporary philosophy for maritime archaeology : flat ontologies, oceanic thought, and the Anthropocene

Bibliographic Information

Contemporary philosophy for maritime archaeology : flat ontologies, oceanic thought, and the Anthropocene

edited by Sara Rich, Peter Campbell.

Sidestone Press, 2023

  • pbk.

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Description and Table of Contents

Description

While terrestrial archaeology has engaged with contemporary philosophy, maritime archaeology has remained in comparative disciplinary – or subdisciplinary – isolation. However, the issues that humans face in the Anthropocene – from global warming to global pandemics – call for transdisciplinary cooperation, and for thinking together beyond the confines of the human-centered philosophical tradition. Growing areas such as the “blue humanities” and “oceanic thinking” draw directly on our maritime past, even as they ponder the future. Theoretically engaged maritime archaeologists could contribute significantly to these areas of thought, as this volume demonstrates. The essays collected here serve as jumping off point, which opens new ways for maritime archaeologists to engage with the most important problems of our time and to benefit from the new insights offered by object-oriented and flat ontologies. The book gathers the analytical thinking of archaeologists, philosophers, marine biologists, and media theorists, and pushes those observations deep into the maritime realm. The contributions then branch out, like tentacles or corals, reaching into the lessons of oil spills, cephalopod hideouts, shipwreck literature, ruined monuments, and beached plastics. The volume concludes with a series of critical responses to these papers, which pushes the dialogue into new areas of inquiry. Taken as a whole, the volume emphasizes that the study of the past is more relevant than ever because serious consideration of our watery world and all its inhabitants is increasingly necessary for our collective survival. This volume takes the first steps toward this reckoning and, as such, it promises to be an important new contribution to lecture and conference halls around the world where oceans and the Anthropocene are under study.

Table of Contents

Prelude: A History of Maritime Archaeological Thought Peter B. Campbell   Collapse, Cataclysm, and Eruption: Alien Archaeologies for the Anthropocene Sara A. Rich and Peter B. Campbell   The Shipwreck of Theseus: Philosophy and Maritime Archaeology Graham Harman   What Gets Washed Up on the Beach: Shipwreck, Literary Culture, and Objects of Interpretation Steve Mentz   Where Land Flows into Sea: An Anthropocene Section Matt Edgeworth   Maritime Christening: Anthropomorphism and the Engender(bend)ing of Metaphor Jeremy Killian and Sara A. Rich   Complicit Objects and New Materialist Praxis Claire S. Watson   Assemblage Theory and the Mediative Practice of Ship Hull Reuse Chelsea M. Cohen   “The Biggest Museum Gallery in the Whole World”: Virtual Excavation and the Musealization of the Seafloor Lisa Yin Han   Naufragic Architecture in the Anthropocene Sara A. Rich, Leila Hamdan, and Justyna Hampel   Octopodology and Dark Amphorae: The Persistence and Non-Human Afterlives of Objects in the Sea Peter B. Campbell   Water as a Hyperfact (reprint) Johan Normark   Drift (reprint) Þóra Pétursdóttir   Contemporary Philosophies for Maritime Archaeology – A Response Joe Flatman   OOO, Archaeology, and the Anthropocene: Comments on Maritime Archaeology and Anthropocene Philosophy Christopher Witmore   Compelled by Things: A Response to Contemporary Philosophy for Maritime Archaeology Matthew Harpster   Theory at Sea: Some Reflections from the Gunwale Bjørnar J. Olsen   Conclusion: If on a Winter Night a Ship Wrecks Peter B. Campbell

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top