1st Edition

Living with Environmental Change Waterworlds

Edited By Kirsten Hastrup, Cecilie Rubow Copyright 2014
    320 Pages 266 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Climate change is a lived experience of changes in the environment, often destroying conventional forms of subsistence and production, creating new patterns of movement and connection, and transforming people’s imagined future.

    This book explores how people across the world think about environmental change and how they act upon the perception of past, present and future opportunities. Drawing on the ethnographic fieldwork of expert authors, it sheds new light on the human experience of and social response to climate change by taking us from the Arctic to the Pacific, from the Southeast Indian Coastal zone to the West-African dry-lands and deserts, as well as to Peruvian mountain communities and cities.

    Divided into four thematic parts - Water, Landscape, Technology, Time – this book uses rich photographic material to accompany the short texts and reflections in order to bring to life the human ingenuity and social responsibility of people in the face of new uncertainties. In an era of melting glaciers, drying lands, and rising seas, it shows how it is part and parcel of human life to take responsibility for the social community and take creative action on the basis of a localized understanding of the environment.

    This highly original contribution to the anthropological study of climate change is a must-read for all those wanting to understand better what climate change means on the ground and interested in a sustainable future for the Earth.

    Introduction  Portraits  Part 1 Water  1. Introduction Kirsten Hastrup  2. Narwhals and Navigators on the Arctic Sea Kirsten Hastrup  3. Ephemeral Tsunamis, Emotional Waves, and Enduring Islands Maria Louise B. Robertson 4. Sea Water to the Mountain Top: The Hydrological Cycle in Chivay, Peru Astrid B. Stensrud  5. Bursting Bodies of Water Mattias B. Rasmussen  6. When it Rains and the River Grows Astrid O. Andersen  7. The Elusive Pleasure of Rain in the Sahel Jonas Ø. Nielsen  8. Dams: Management versus Luck Mette F. Olwig  9. Water as Power and Destroyer Frank Sejersen  10. New Opportunities turning into Disaster Anette Reenberg  11. Coastal Gardens and their Magic Frida Hastrup  11. The Sprawled Way of Detergents Cecilie Rubow  12. Droughts: Complex Social Phenomena Christian Vium  13. Water Quantity vs. Water Quality Laura V. Rasmussen  14. Fixed and Fluid Waters: Mirroring the Arctic and the Pacific Kirsten Hastrup and Maria Louise B. Robertson  Part 2. Technology  15. Introduction Cecilie Rubow  16. Sea Level and Coastal Protection Cecilie Rubow  17. Urbanizing Water in a Context of Scarcity Christian Vium  18. A Job-Machine Powered by Water Frank Sejersen  19. Life in the Shadow of a Water Tower Astrid O. Andersen  20. Waste and Water – Connected and Mixed Maria Louise B. Robertson  21. Inverted Watering Strategies in Senegal Anette Reenberg  22. Cobs as Technological Solutions Mette F. Olwig   23. The Imagined Water Pump Jonas Ø. Nielsen  24. Unpredictable Side Effects of New Technologies Laura V. Rasmussen  25. Scalable and Fluid Sprinklers Astrid B. Stensrud  26. Dry Technologies and Community Bureaucracies Mattias B. Rasmussen  27. A Life Jacket Story Frida Hastrup  28. Unpacking the Dog Sledge Kirsten Hastrup  29. Water Technologies. Mirroring Great Expectations in Greenland and Ghana Mette F. Olwig and Frank Sejersen  Part 3. Landscape  30. Introduction Kirsten Hastrup  31. Hualca Hualca: Mountain Lord and Life Source Astrid B. Stensrud  32. Knowing Landscapes of Water in Kiribati Maria Louise B. Robertson  33. Borders at sea Frida Hastrup  34. Making Urban Landscapes – People, Water, Materials Astrid O. Andersen  35. Dreams, Water and the Remodelling of Place Frank Sejersen  36. Strategic Thinking: Changeable Usages of the Nigerien Landscape Anette Reenberg  37. Landscapes of Droughts and Floods on the Desert Margins Laura V. Rasmussen  38. A Landscape of Ice - Kirsten Hastrup  39. Walking Along Water Mattias B. Rasmussen  39. Old Water, Gardens and Prophetic Powers in the Sahel Jonas Ø. Nielsen  40. Can You See Climate Change in a Changing Environment? Cecilie Rubow  41. Mental Topographies Mette F. Olwig  42. Nomadic Landscapes and Ephemeral Resources - Christian Vium  43. Icons of Climate Change. Mirroring the Sahel and the Andes Astrid O. Andersen/Jonas Ø. Nielsen  Part 4. Time  44. Introduction Cecilie Rubow  45. Glacial Time Kirsten Hastrup  46. Seasons, Timings, and the Rhythms of Life Mattias B. Rasmussen  47. Flexible Trajectories: Nomadic Pastoral Mobility Patterns Christian Vium  48. Still Life on the Shore Frida Hastrup  49. Appraising Change: A Question of Baseline Anette Reenberg  50. Litres per Second: Measuring the Water Flow Astrid B. Stensrud  51. New Scenarios and Unstable Temporalities Cecilie Rubow  52. Facing Reality - Managing/Imagining the Time Left on an Atoll Maria Louise B. Robertson  53. Anticipating Futures and the Rhythms of Water - Frank Sejersen  54. Slow versus Fast Changes in Sahelian Land Use Systems Laura V. Rasmussen  55. Three Calendars and the Test of Time in Northern Sahel Jonas Ø. Nielsen  56. "Packages" with Disparate Time Horizons Mette F. Olwig  57. Urban Talks of Climate and Weather Astrid O. Andersen  58. Times of Climate Change in Religion and Ethics. Mirroring the Andes and the Pacific Cecilie Rubow and Mattias B. Rasmussen

     

    Biography

    Kirsten Hastrup is Professor at the Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

    Cecilie Rubow is Associate Professor at the Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

    Is it possible to understand climate change through scientific theories, data and models?  Hastrup and Rubow in this important book show why the answer is a decisive ‘no’.  Drawing upon a rich and diverse array of sites around the world, Living with Environmental Change: Waterworlds offers dozens of compelling portraits of what climate change means to different people living in different places.  This impressive collection of short essays shows why the anthropological study of climate change is at least as important as its scientific study.  Rather than something to be feared, climate change is becoming part of the way in which humans and their cultures continually respond to the future and thereby re-shape it.

    –Mike Hulme, King’s College London, UK

    A unique contribution to the understanding of climate change as it appears to people all over the world. Using the framework of water, landscape, technology and climate it is a bold attempt to summarise a lot of human interest, experience and theory. It should be appreciated by anyone interested in the topic and not just by specialists.

    –Jonathan Paul Marshall, University Technology Sydney, Australia

    The Waterworlds team has produced a book that ‘shows rather than tells’ how communities experience climate change at a local level. By highlighting narratives from different parts of the world, they illuminate the complex pressures that emerge as shifts in climate initiate changes in social and material environments, as well as the creative adaptations that people are making in confronting these challenges.

    –Veronica Strang, Durham University, UK

    Like a splash of cold water on the face of someone who has grown drowsy, this book awakens the reader to the urgency of water issues in every corner of our world. Like a glass of cool water on a hot dry day, it slakes the reader’s thirst for a full understanding of the issues that will permit the construction of a sustainable future.

    –Ben Orlove, Columbia University, USA

    Of the many ways of considering climate change, this large format and lavishly illustrated book uses the lens of anthropology: what climate change means to different people living in a diversity of sites ranging from Greenland to Burkina Faso, Ghana, India, Mauritania and Peru to the Cook Islands and Kiribati.

    Spore Magazine

    Supported by its colourful and personal presentation, both in text and appearance, this a great contribution to easily accessible knowledge and therefore makes it a highly valuable read for all audiences. It opens avenues for further enquiry and calls for further contributions of this type on local and regional life with environmental change.

    Nikolas Sellheim, University of Lapland, Finland