CFP: Underwater Worlds


CFP: Underwater Worlds: Aquatic Visions in Art, Science and Literature, University of Oxford, 15-16 September 2015.

underwaterworlds

What lies beneath the surface of the water? From sirens and sea monsters to shipwrecks and the drowned city of Atlantis, the unseen depths of oceans, lakes and rivers have formed the canvas for countless imaginative visions and stories. Different cultures have envisioned underwater environments as supernatural forces to be feared, resources to exploit, aesthetic pleasures to be enjoyed and fragile ecosystems to be protected. In the twenty-first century, the on-going endangerment of marine life by human causes such as climate change, overfishing, oil spills and mineral extraction compels us to re-evaluate our relationship with the aquatic world. At the same time, in recent years, rising sea levels, floods and tsunamis have demonstrated in dramatic fashion the vulnerability of our species to changes in the Earth’s water distribution. In light of these issues, ‘Underwater Worlds’ will examine how humans past and present have imagined and represented aquatic environments through art and literature.
Keynotes by:

Professor John Mack (University of East Anglia), author of The Sea: A Cultural History (2011).

Professor Christiana Payne (Oxford Brookes University), author of Where the Sea Meets the Land: Artists on the Coast in Nineteenth Century Britain (1998) and The Power of the Sea: Making Waves in British Art 1790-2014 (with Janette Kerr, 2014).

Professor Bernhard Klein (University of Kent), author of Fictions of the Sea: Critical Perspectives on the Ocean in British Literature and Culture (2002) and Sea Changes: Historicizing the Ocean (with Gesa Mackenthun, 2004).

Dr Gunda Windmüller (University of Bonn), author of Rushing Into Floods: Staging the Sea in Restoration and Early Eighteenth-Century English Drama (2012).

Themes for papers might include (but need not be limited to):
Representing underwater worlds in narratives, images and objects
Reconstructing underwater worlds in museums and aquariums
Sea life and sea monsters
Technologies of underwater exploration
Histories of marine studies and oceanography
Collecting, classifying and exhibiting aquatic specimens
Sailing and Shipwrecks
Swimming and diving
Fishing, trawling, dredging and panning
Aquatic themes in religion
Water surface and depth as psychoanalytic symbols
Themes of flooding and submergence in art and literature
Underwater film

Please send your 250-word paper abstract to [email protected] no later than the 30th of April 2015. General inquiries may be made to the conference organiser Dr Will Abberley at [email protected]. See also the conference web site underwaterworlds.net/.

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CFP: Underwater Worlds


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