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Located within the field of environmental humanities, this volume engages with one of the most pressing contemporary environmental challenges of our time: how can we shift our understanding and realign what water means to us? Water is increasingly at the centre of scientific and public debates about climate change. In these debates, rising sea levels compete against desertification hurricanes and floods follow periods of prolonged drought. As we continue to pollute, canalize and desalinate waters, the ambiguous nature of our relationship with these entities becomes visible. From the paradisiac and pristine scenery of holiday postcards through to the devastated landscapes of post-tsunami news reports, images of waters surround us.
Introduction: flux and change
Water stories: (Re)presenting waters
Sapphire stories: disenchantment and sense of wonder in the underwater world
Imaginings of water: Anthropocene waters and the entanglement of the living
The blue Anthropocene and the oceanic south: reading containerisation and inundation diffractively
Poetic economies of Walden: keeping current(cy)
Salt, water and sound: translations from the Murray Mouth
The wild edge: a language for coastal landscapes
Water law and lore: waters and/in cultures
The WaterLore project: mapping the sacred in cultural waters
Te Mana o te Wai: relating to and through the charisma of water
Divining
Water remembers: drowning colonialism and swimming in wealth
The weight of river stones
(Re)imagining waters: writing on and with waters
Call-and-response writing on water
Fresh water, salt water: socially engaged art, collaboration and the environment
Storied matter
New perspectives on water significance: joining art and joining art and science to communicate water ecology
I am Phytoplankton