Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity

We cannot think of a time that is oceanlessOr of an ocean not littered with wastage—T. S. Eliot, “The Dry Salvages”A Poem that Renders the Sea as Pedagogical History, Lorna Goodison's “Arctic, Antarctic, Atlantic, Pacific, Indian Ocean” depicts Caribbean schoolchildren learning “the world'...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Deloughrey, Elizabeth
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72d736jx
id ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt72d736jx
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt72d736jx 2023-06-11T04:07:13+02:00 Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity Deloughrey, Elizabeth 703 - 712 2010-05-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72d736jx unknown eScholarship, University of California qt72d736jx https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72d736jx public PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, vol 125, iss 3 Language Studies Linguistics Literary Studies article 2010 ftcdlib 2023-05-29T17:59:43Z We cannot think of a time that is oceanlessOr of an ocean not littered with wastage—T. S. Eliot, “The Dry Salvages”A Poem that Renders the Sea as Pedagogical History, Lorna Goodison's “Arctic, Antarctic, Atlantic, Pacific, Indian Ocean” depicts Caribbean schoolchildren learning “the world's waters rolled into a chant.” After shivering through the “cold” Arctic and Antarctic, the class “suffered [a] sea change” in the destabilizing Atlantic, abandoning the terrestrial stability of their benches to enter an ocean in which only their voices orient them in time and space as they “call out across / the currents of hot air.” In fathoming what Derek Walcott has called “the sea [as] history,” their “small bodies” are “borrowed / by the long drowned” (Goodison). While colonial narratives of maritime expansion have long depicted the ocean as blank space to be traversed, these students enter Atlantic stasis, a place occupied by the wasted lives of Middle Passage modernity. This Atlantic is not aqua nullius, circumscribed and mapped by the student oceanographer, but rather a place where the haunting of the past overtakes the present subject. Édouard Glissant has described the Atlantic as a “beginning” for modernity, a space “whose time is marked by … balls and chains gone green” (Poetics 6): a sign of submarine history and its material decay. Thus, Atlantic modernity becomes legible through the sign of heavy water, an oceanic stasis that signals the dissolution of wasted lives. After the poem's irruptive consonance of the “bodies borrowed,” the vowels lengthen to mimic a “long drowned” history of the Atlantic, and the narrative is transformed. Reminding us that the Middle Passage “abyss is a tautology” that haunts ocean modernity (Glissant, Poetics 6), the poem traps the students (and readers) in the violent corporeal history of the Atlantic. Instead of moving on to the next ocean of the lesson, the class repeats the word “Atlantic, as if wooden pegs / were forced between our lips; Atlantic, as teacher's / strap whipped the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Arctic Indian Lorna ENVELOPE(62.789,62.789,-67.787,-67.787) Pacific Walcott ENVELOPE(-63.317,-63.317,-69.083,-69.083)
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Language Studies
Linguistics
Literary Studies
spellingShingle Language Studies
Linguistics
Literary Studies
Deloughrey, Elizabeth
Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
topic_facet Language Studies
Linguistics
Literary Studies
description We cannot think of a time that is oceanlessOr of an ocean not littered with wastage—T. S. Eliot, “The Dry Salvages”A Poem that Renders the Sea as Pedagogical History, Lorna Goodison's “Arctic, Antarctic, Atlantic, Pacific, Indian Ocean” depicts Caribbean schoolchildren learning “the world's waters rolled into a chant.” After shivering through the “cold” Arctic and Antarctic, the class “suffered [a] sea change” in the destabilizing Atlantic, abandoning the terrestrial stability of their benches to enter an ocean in which only their voices orient them in time and space as they “call out across / the currents of hot air.” In fathoming what Derek Walcott has called “the sea [as] history,” their “small bodies” are “borrowed / by the long drowned” (Goodison). While colonial narratives of maritime expansion have long depicted the ocean as blank space to be traversed, these students enter Atlantic stasis, a place occupied by the wasted lives of Middle Passage modernity. This Atlantic is not aqua nullius, circumscribed and mapped by the student oceanographer, but rather a place where the haunting of the past overtakes the present subject. Édouard Glissant has described the Atlantic as a “beginning” for modernity, a space “whose time is marked by … balls and chains gone green” (Poetics 6): a sign of submarine history and its material decay. Thus, Atlantic modernity becomes legible through the sign of heavy water, an oceanic stasis that signals the dissolution of wasted lives. After the poem's irruptive consonance of the “bodies borrowed,” the vowels lengthen to mimic a “long drowned” history of the Atlantic, and the narrative is transformed. Reminding us that the Middle Passage “abyss is a tautology” that haunts ocean modernity (Glissant, Poetics 6), the poem traps the students (and readers) in the violent corporeal history of the Atlantic. Instead of moving on to the next ocean of the lesson, the class repeats the word “Atlantic, as if wooden pegs / were forced between our lips; Atlantic, as teacher's / strap whipped the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Deloughrey, Elizabeth
author_facet Deloughrey, Elizabeth
author_sort Deloughrey, Elizabeth
title Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
title_short Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
title_full Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
title_fullStr Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Waters: Waste and Atlantic Modernity
title_sort heavy waters: waste and atlantic modernity
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2010
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72d736jx
op_coverage 703 - 712
long_lat ENVELOPE(62.789,62.789,-67.787,-67.787)
ENVELOPE(-63.317,-63.317,-69.083,-69.083)
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
Indian
Lorna
Pacific
Walcott
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
Indian
Lorna
Pacific
Walcott
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
op_source PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, vol 125, iss 3
op_relation qt72d736jx
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72d736jx
op_rights public
_version_ 1768380174655553536