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Geographers say there are two kinds of islands. This is valuable information for the imagination because it confirms what the imagination already knew.
Marie-Claire Beaulieu (ed.), A Cultural History of the Sea in Antiquity , London: Bloomsbury, 2021, p. 109-127, 2021
Islands' features constantly stirred the Greek artistic imagination and, from the archaic poets, through the fifth–century dramatists, to Plato's Atlantis or the Hellenistic writers of paradoxography, literary islands' representations are strongly consistent between themselves. As the mythical thought and the poetic imagery, although embedded in images, work with analogies and parallels, the concept of insularity thus proceeds for the Greeks from these series of representations and cultural tropes. This chapter tries to retrace how did the Greeks perceive νησος 'island' (compared to both the sea and the continent) and the shore (as liminal space between sea and earth), how did they represent the islands and thus the insularity. It is not so much the physical features of islands (commonly described with both realistic and schematic details) and specific island individuals as the metaphorical expressions intimately associated with the ways in which the Greeks represented the islands and the shores. More than realistic physical landscapes or island phenomena, they are traits of respectively, insular and liminal symbolism. Islands and shores, they both separate and, at the same time, join sea and land, water and earth, contiguous realms yet opposed in many respects.
The Littoral Zone: Australian Writers and their Contexts: Nature, Culture and Literature 04, 2007
This chapter investigates the impact of literary tropes on island topography. The survey approach of island literature is abandoned in favour of ecocritical praxis, examining instead the literature of selected temperate islands (with populations varying from 2 to 20,000). Cattle farming, ideological disjunction, and mortality are explored in two settler autobiographies set in "paradise" (Three Hummock Island); "descent with modification" is traced in the text and farming practices (sealing, Soldier Settlement pastoral, and salvage) in a work of fiction based in "Eden" (King Island); and in the final work (indigenous autobiography and myth set on North Stradbroke Island), the politics of the "land ethic" and land rights confront a sea country pastoral.
Island Studies Journal, 2006
2017
For as long as human cultures have been imagining and constructing worlds there have been island worlds. Island topographies have occupied a considerable place in the cultural imaginary from some of the earliest recorded literature, and they are to be found in discussions of mythology, philosophy, and religion across vastly divergent historical and literary cultures. They are important symbolic landscapes that carry a weight of cultural meaning within the popular imagination. In attempting to define precisely what an island is, however, we find that these divergent meanings often collide. Islands are at once insular and small, as well as vast and unbound; they are cut off from the mainland but occupy an important structural relation to it. Islands imply isolation and oneness, but they are also the symbols of interconnectivity, representative of the continuous geomorphological processes occurring beneath the earth's surface. They are microcosms and entire worlds; places of refuge as well as suffering; sites of freedom and imprisonment; and landscapes of punishment and redemption. They are neither small nor big, neither one thing nor the other, but represent what Godfrey Baldacchino terms a "nervous duality" (2005, p. 248). Rather than thinking of islands in isolation, an island "confronts us as a juxtaposition and confluence of the understanding of local and global realities, of interior and exterior references of meaning." (Baldacchino, 2005, p. 248). Islands are thus characterised by their interstitiality, and the polyvalency of their cultural signification. They have been defined variously in terms of their "boundedness" and as "places of possibility and promise" (Edmond and Smith, 2003, p. 2). They are "laboratory environments" (p. 3) for various social, anthropological, and botanical experiments, and serve "as early warning signal from which we can examine human impacts on a small scale." (Walker and Bellingham, 2011, page xii). The concept of an island "brings with it at once the notion of solitude and of a founding population," (Beer, 2003, p. 33) as well as serving as an "aesthetic refuge from the confused, congested public realm," (Conrad, 2009, p. 15) and as a place of "healing, inspiration and perspective upon the vulnerability of our own present civilization." (Manwaring, 2008, p. 1). Islands are "reflections on origins" (Loxley, 1990, p. 3), "places of arrival and departure" (Edmond and Smith, 2003, p. 7), and "metaphors for individual lives, with a beginning, middle, and end" (Rainbird, 2007, p. 13). They are an "existential terrain" upon which the individual is "confronted by edges, or by the end" (Conrad, 2009, p. 7-8). The island metaphor also functions as a "dynamic space of becoming" (Lane, 1995, p. 16), a "place of reflection where one knows oneself as is and would be" (Denning, 2004, p. 100) as one is forced to fend for oneself. Indeed, it is upon the island that the "conditions for a rebirth or genesis are made possible" (Loxley, 1990, p. 3). Islands are "site[s] of double identity" and are "always-already in the process of transforming the particular into something other than its (original, essential) self" (Bongie, 1998, p. 18). Indeed, islands should enable people "to enter into a different state of consciousness" (Manwaring, 2008, p. 9). The appeal of the island image within the cultural imagination "is both fed by and feeds upon the use of the concept of island in reality or metaphor by artists and writers" (Royle, 2001, p. 13). The island image has thus been rehearsed and reused throughout literary history, and its symbolic function has been informed both by the uniqueness of its physiological characteristics and the various historical periods across which the trope has been carried-from mythological antiquity to those fictional voyages of discovery, and from European exploration into the Southern Seas to contemporary islomania, and the cultural obsession with islands. It is precisely the fluctuation "between the perceived and the projected, between the actual and the imaginary" (Manwaring, 2008, p. 63) that constituted early imaginings of islands as fictive worlds. Islands are "the most glorious map of the imagination" (Manley and Manley, 1970, p. 228) for it is through and with islands that our early fictions began to spatialize our earliest literary-historical mythologies. Island landscapes provide "metaphors that allow us to give shape to a world that would otherwise be formless and meaningless" (Gillis, 2004, p. 1); they are originary topoi upon which narratives of birth and rebirth have been written. John Gillis rightly notes that "Any history of islomania must begin with the Odyssey." (2004, p.5). It is no coincidence that Homer elects to set so much of the action of his Greek epic on the islands of the Ionian Sea, the birthplace of much of the earliest historical Greek myths. Islands are essential to the spatial narrative of The Odyssey, and Odysseus's journey from one island to another affords the narrative an expansive imaginative geography that often, though not always, overlaps with the material geography of the extant Ionian. Most famous of the islands encountered in The Odyssey, perhaps, is Aeaea, belonging the sea-witch Circe, and Siren Island, home to the infamous sirens, creatures who in all respects resemble beautiful young women, and who lure passing sailors to their deaths. From their earliest inception, islands were cast as threatening, corrupting places to and from which men were exiled; they were places which impelled action and travail, and which called out to be explored. Most significantly, Circe's island is reported to be located at the edge of the known world, far beyond the oceans that Homer's contemporaries had explored. While the islands of The Odyssey represent mythological geographies upon which we can imagine our own conception, they also plot a fictive cartography within the cultural imagination of other islands yet to be discovered.
How to Read an Island, 2015
In 2015, I wrote a book on how to "read", an island, an idea I borrowed from Richard Taylor's execellent "How to Read a Church". My book is about reading / understanding island societies, using Edward de Bonos Six Thinking Hats concept. It was published first in English and then in Swedish and formed the basis of a 10-p University Course on the geography of islands. ISBN 978-952-93-4583-0
Certain limitations arise from the persistent consideration of two common relations of islands in the humanities and social sciences: land and sea, and island and continent/mainland. What remains largely absent or silent are ways of being, knowing and doing-ontologies, epistemologies and methods-that illuminate island spaces as inter-related, mutually constituted and co-constructed: as island and island. Therefore, this paper seeks to map out and justify a research agenda proposing a robust and comprehensive exploration of this third and comparatively neglected nexus of relations. In advancing these aims, the paper's goal is to (re)inscribe the theoretical, metaphorical, real and empirical power and potential of the archipelago: of seas studded with islands; island chains; relations that may embrace equivalence, mutual relation and difference in signification.
Island Studies Journal, 2008
Island Studies Journal, Vol. ... life moving back and forth over illusory geographical boundaries and struggling to come to terms with competing identities. ... hopefully help to refine the current state of 'island studies', while energizing and provoking a now overdue discussion about its ...
2023
Back to Reality! Whether in art or philosophy, recent years have witnessed an outright run on the real, under banners such as speculative realism, neomaterialism, documentality, eco-realism, speculative poetics, or object-oriented aesthetics. Only progressively it starts to become clear that what these approaches respectively mean by realism differs sharply. The workshop shall confront various epistemic and artistic strategies seeking to grasp the ever-evading nature of reality, and work towards understanding the reasons behind this renewed desire for touching the “thing itself”. If the only claim these different realisms seem to agree upon is the need to decentre the human perspective, could it be that perspectivalness itself provides a key to a novel understanding of reality?
Las publicaciones de normas y guías de Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI), una de las cuales es el documento contenido aquí, son desarrolladas mediante un proceso de desarrollo de normas por consenso voluntario. Este proceso reúne a voluntarios y/o trata de obtener las opiniones de personas que tienen interés en el tema cubierto por esta publicación. Aunque PMI administra el proceso y establece reglas para promover la equidad en el desarrollo del consenso, no redacta el documento y no prueba, ni evalúa, ni verifica de manera independiente la exactitud o integridad de ninguna información ni la solidez de ningún juicio contenidos en sus publicaciones de normas y guías.
Studi di Archeologia Cretese XI) Padova 2014. ISBN 978-88-6125-068-0., 2014
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