Water in social imagination : : from technological optimism to contemporary environmentalism / / edited by Jane Costlow, Yrjo Haila, Arja Rosenholm.

Water in Social Imagination considers how human communities have known, imagined and shaped water – and how water has shaped both material culture and the imagination. Essays from diverse perspectives offer histories of water at different scales – from community water wells and sacred springs to Sib...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Nature, Culture and Literature ; v.12
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, 2017.
Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Series:Nature, Culture and Literature 12.
Physical Description:1 online resource (296 pages) :; color illustrations.
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Description
Other title:Preliminary Material /
Knowing Water: An Introduction /
Liquid Scale: Trans-Scalar Thinking and the Perception of Water /
Water and Urban Space in Late Medieval Stockholm /
The Many Roles of the Dynamic Danube in Early Modern Europe: Representations in Contemporary Sources /
Water, Space, and Desire in Soviet Fiction: The Case of Konstantin Paustovsky /
The Interplay of Water, Home, and Narration in Überfahrt by Anna Seghers /
The River in Thaw-era Soviet Popular Song (1954–1970): The Formation of an Amicable Space /
“The Sovereign of the River and the Sovereign of All Nature—in the Same Trap” /
The Pollution of the Baltic Sea: A Mirror Image of Modernization /
The Deep Waters of Literary Theme. Nature, Narrative, and Identity in Barbara Kingsolver’s The Lacuna /
A Journey to the Bottom of the Sea. Water Myths and Risk Society in Veronica Pimenoff’s Risteilijät /
“It was only a tiny spring”: Veneration, Value and Local Springs in Contemporary Russia /
Securing Water: Ambiguities of Control vs. Coexistence /
Index /
Summary:Water in Social Imagination considers how human communities have known, imagined and shaped water – and how water has shaped both material culture and the imagination. Essays from diverse perspectives offer histories of water at different scales – from community water wells and sacred springs to Siberian rivers and the regulated space of the Baltic Sea. From early modernization through Soviet style technological optimism to contemporary environmentalism, water’s ideological uses are multiple. With sustained attention not just to state policy and the technologies of high modernity, but to creative resistance to utilitarian imaginations, these essays insist on fluidities of meaning, ambiguities that derive both from water’s physical mutability and from its dual nature as life necessity and agent of destruction.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9004333444
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Jane Costlow, Yrjo Haila, Arja Rosenholm.