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Shipwreck Hauntography: Underwater Ruins and the Uncanny [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 266 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 13 Illustrations, color
  • Sari: Maritime Humanities, 1400-1800
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463727701
  • ISBN-13: 9789463727709
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 266 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 13 Illustrations, color
  • Sari: Maritime Humanities, 1400-1800
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Sep-2021
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463727701
  • ISBN-13: 9789463727709
1. Goes beyond understanding shipwrecks as "dead ships" or "underwater cultural heritage" and challenges the assumptions upon which these common tropes are based. 2. Integrates art practice with archaeological and art historical theory to provide - at last - a critical assessment and theoretical backbone for the middle-aged discipline of nautical archaeology. 3. Combines art historical, archaeological, and artistic epistemologies to formulate new ways of conceptualizing and visualizing the uncanniness of shipwrecks. 4. Includes original artworks produced by the author published for the first time. Drawing on a broad theoretical range from speculative realism to feminist psychoanalysis and anti-colonialism, this book represents a radical departure from traditional scholarship on maritime archaeology. Shipwreck Hauntography asserts that nautical archaeology bears the legacy of Early Modern theological imperialism, most evident through the savior-scholar model that resurrects—physically or virtually—ships from wrecks. Instead of construing shipwrecks as dead, awaiting resurrection from the seafloor, this book presents them as vibrant if not recalcitrant objects, having shaken off anthropogenesis through varying stages of ruination. Sara Rich illustrates this anarchic condition with 'hauntographs' of five Age of 'Discovery' shipwrecks, each of which elucidates the wonder of failure and finitude, alongside an intimate brush with the eerie, horrific, and uncanny.

Arvustused

"What would contemporary theory look like if it moved underwater? In her wonderfully written Shipwreck Hauntography, Sara Rich rewrites the history of modernity in terms of its sunken vessels. Shipwrecks are not dead masses in need of salvation, but are especially uncanny forms of living matter." - Graham Harman, Southern California Institute of Architecture

"[ ...] Rich includes, and magnifcently so, her own art, doing so along with the text to drive home the books essential point, that wrecks are not dead, nor do they need us to 'save' them or resurrect them." - James P. Delgado, Journal of Maritime Archaeology, Vol. 17, Iss. 04

Illustration List
9(2)
Preface: Hauntographies of Ordinary Shipwrecks 11(14)
1 Resetting the Binary Bones
25(50)
Legacy (Marigalante)
30(4)
Liturgy (The Gresham Ship)
34(10)
Litany (Santa Maria)
44(9)
Liminality (The Nissia)
53(22)
2 Broken Ship, Dead Ship
75(40)
Ontology (The Yarmouth Roads)
77(4)
Meontology (Holigost)
81(3)
Deontology (Mary Rose)
84(10)
Mereology (Argo and Ark)
94(21)
3 Among the Tentative Haunters
115(34)
Conversion (Terror and Erebus)
118(5)
Inversion (Impregnable)
123(7)
Delirium (Belle)
130(4)
Desiderium (The Ribadeo)
134(15)
4 Vibrant Corpses
149(40)
Entropy (Nuestra Senora de los Remedios)
151(7)
Negentropy (Magdalena)
158(7)
Putrefaction (Sanchi)
165(6)
Purification (Costa Concordia)
171(18)
5 Macabre Simulacra
189(38)
Exploration (Melckmeyt)
191(4)
Exploitation (Thistlegorm)
195(4)
Eschatology (Batavia)
199(10)
Elegy (Bayonnaise)
209(18)
Postface. On Underwater Seances and Punk Eulogies 227(8)
Complete Works Cited 235(28)
Index 263
Sara Rich is a maritime archaeologist, art historian, artist, and author of speculative fiction. She is currently Assistant Professor of Honors and Interdisciplinary Studies at Coastal Carolina University.