Update cookies preferences

Language, Water, Power [Hardback]

(University of Technology Sydney)
  • Format: Hardback, 75 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Series: Elements in Language and Power
  • Pub. Date: 30-Jun-2026
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1009736507
  • ISBN-13: 9781009736503
Other books in subject:
  • Hardback
  • Price: 57,94 €*
  • * the price is final i.e. no additional discount will apply
  • Regular price: 77,25 €
  • Save 25%
  • This book is not yet published. Book will arrive in about 3-4 weeks after it is published. Please allow another 2 weeks for shipping outside Estonia.
  • Quantity:
  • Add to basket
  • Delivery time 2-4 weeks
  • Add to Wishlist
Language, Water, Power
  • Format: Hardback, 75 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Series: Elements in Language and Power
  • Pub. Date: 30-Jun-2026
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1009736507
  • ISBN-13: 9781009736503
Other books in subject:
This Element is about language, water and power. It challenges the terracentric bias of much scholarship in language studies, suggesting instead that oceans and rivers should be central in investigations of language, history, culture, society and politics. Working through different engagements with water swimming, surfing, sailing and diving this Element explores how thinking in and with water can transform our understandings of justice, power and language. By taking water seriously as both a social and material category, hydrosocial perspectives draw attention to the ways modern water and language are controlled, restricted, standardized and contained. A hydrocolonial lens focuses on the centrality of water in colonial regimes, the oceanic origins of creoles and the need to decolonize control and conceptions of water. For critical hydrosocial language studies language is entangled in an inequitable watery world, and language study from below is a form of spiritual, material and embodied engagement.

More info

Thinking in and with water can transform our relations to justice, power and language as embodied practice.
1. From bottled water to water languaging;
2. Swimming laps: modern
water and filtered languages;
3. Bodyboarding at Bronte: language and
embodiment;
4. Sailing through the heads: hydrocolonial relations;
5.
Watching Weedies 20 metres down: other worlds;
6. Critical hydrosocial
language studies; References.