2019
DOI: 10.5130/csr.v25i2.6887
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Water Flourishing in the Anthropocene

Abstract: What does it entail to foreground water flourishing as a stance toward the Anthropocene? During an exercise at the Anthropocene Campus Melbourne, about twenty participants individually drew images of ‘water flourishing’ leading, with only one or two exceptions of Edenic representations, to a wall of images depicting no humans. That small experience reproduced a larger cultural and environmental management configuration: people-less water flourishing. If we face such constraints in imagining, representing, and … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Edited comparative collections such as ‘People at the Well’ (Hahn et al 2012), and reviews in the anthropology of water (Ballestero 2019a; Hastrup 2013; Orlove and Caton 2010; Strang 2005; Vogt and Walsh 2021; Walsh 2022) all emphasise ‘waterworlds’ – the bio‐social importance and culturally imbued experience of water, and its multiplicity and ubiquity. The focus on water includes cultural visions of good water futures in relation to living in the Anthropocene (see Cattelino et al 2019) and crucial questions regarding the diverse economics of such futures (Wutich and Beresford 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Edited comparative collections such as ‘People at the Well’ (Hahn et al 2012), and reviews in the anthropology of water (Ballestero 2019a; Hastrup 2013; Orlove and Caton 2010; Strang 2005; Vogt and Walsh 2021; Walsh 2022) all emphasise ‘waterworlds’ – the bio‐social importance and culturally imbued experience of water, and its multiplicity and ubiquity. The focus on water includes cultural visions of good water futures in relation to living in the Anthropocene (see Cattelino et al 2019) and crucial questions regarding the diverse economics of such futures (Wutich and Beresford 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%