LIMINALWATER: Liminal Waterway Countercultures


Project Summary

 

While most academics approach Europe from the perspective of the continent’s landmass, we explore the waterways that marks its peripheries or limits, especially its “liminal” waterways – those that mark edges or boundaries and therefore enable interesting things to happen. We focus on what we call liminal waterway countercultures, the creative alternative forms of life that have emerged in these spaces. Against the backdrop of Europe’s crisis of diversification (the ways in which cultural diversity and human mobility have appeared in narratives of panic across the continent) and of its ecological crisis (as rivers and coastlines dry up, erode and flood), countercultures emerge which provide models of resilience. We retrieve submerged narratives of how water – imaginatively or literally – has been central to how communities, artists, activists and municipalities have re-appropriated post-colonial, post-fascist and post-socialist urban and natural space. We use historical, literary, spatial and anthropological methods to explore these multilingual sites of cultural production and conviviality, through which tides of people, ideas and objects flow. Our cases – some historical and some contemporary – are located in the Atlantic estuaries the Ria Formosa and Merseyside, the Channel ports London and Ostend, the island of Rhodes, the Mediterranean coasts of Marseille and the Balkans, and the riverine network linking central Europe to the Adriatic. Working with our Associate Partners – Sciaena (a Portuguese grassroots environmental NGO), the Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations (Mucem), and the Maritime and History Museum of the Croatian Littoral in Rijeka (PPMHP) – our project will produce digital audio-visual material on each site (including virtual “walks” through each as well as cartographic resources enabling non-academic users in and beyond our sites to visualise them and flows between them), and culminate in a museum exhibition at PPMHP, creating future cultural knowledge resilience in frontline nodes of climate crisis and migrational shift.

Keywords:

liminality waterways, countercultures, blue humanities, environmental humanities, digital humanities.

Consortium:

Project Leader: Ben Gidley, Birkbeck, University of London, United Kingdom
Sami Everett, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Raquel Carvalheira, Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia, Portugal
Yvonne Zivkovic, Karl Franzens University Graz, Austria
Milka Car, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Pierre Sintès, Aix Marseille University, France

Associate partners:

Ana Matias [Climate Co-ordinator], Sciaena, Portugal
Aude Fanlo [Head of Research and Education], Mucem (Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations/Musée des Civilisations de l’Europe et de la Méditerranée), France
Tamara Mataija [Director], Maritime and History Museum of the Croatian Littoral, Croatia


Our use of cookies

We use necessary cookies to make our site work. We'd also like to set optional analytics cookies to help us improve it. We won't set these optional cookies unless you enable them. Using this tool will set a cookie on your device to remember your preferences.

For more detailed information about the cookies we use, see our Cookies page


Necessary cookies

Necessary cookies enable core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility. You may disable these by changing your browser settings, but this may affect how the website functions.


Analytics cookies

We'd like to set Google Analytics cookies to help us to improve our website by collecting and reporting information on how you use it. The cookies collect information in a way that does not directly identify anyone.