Ocean is the New East

On a recent visit to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, I lingered a little while longer than usual in my favorite exhibit: the Sant Ocean Hall (see oppo-site page). Wandering with no telos in mind, I let myself bask before bioluminescent beings, tremble in awe at the improbabilit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Montroso, Alan S.
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: punctum books 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.03
https://punctumbooks.com/titles/things-from-the-sea/
id ftdatacite:10.21983/p3.0182.1.03
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.21983/p3.0182.1.03 2023-05-15T17:34:50+02:00 Ocean is the New East Montroso, Alan S. 2017 PDF https://dx.doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.03 https://punctumbooks.com/titles/things-from-the-sea/ en eng punctum books https://dx.doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.00 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 CC-BY-NC-SA Text article-journal Chapter ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.03 https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.00 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z On a recent visit to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, I lingered a little while longer than usual in my favorite exhibit: the Sant Ocean Hall (see oppo-site page). Wandering with no telos in mind, I let myself bask before bioluminescent beings, tremble in awe at the improbability of the extremophiles, and gaze up like a supplicant at the model of Phoenix, a North Atlantic right whale. Deeply affected by these strange strangers,1 I stretched my imagination towards the inconceivable and wondered at the sheer breadth of possibilities for ways of living in the still-occult thalassic regions of Earth’s oceans. I found solace in the evidence that so many vast and heterogeneous lives can flourish without the intrusive light of the sun or human reason, and that such animacy is possible in the darkness, which is, according to Stacy Alaimo, a “world where the Copernican revolution is irrelevant.”2 I then with some discomfort imagined myself embodying an oceanic form, imagined breathing without oxygen, thriving at thermal vents, and manifesting light with my own body. I imagined myself as an aqueous and somewhat amorphous body squeezed and strangled by the just bearable pressures of the deep sea. I attempted a posthumanist thought project similar to what Alaimo describes in “Violet-Black,” her contribution to Prismatic Ecology, in which she insists that “thinking with and through the elec-tronic jellyfish, seeing through the prosthetic eye, playing open-ended, improvisa-tional language games with deep-sea creatures, being transformed by astonishment and desire enact a posthumanist practice.” Book Part North Atlantic North Atlantic right whale DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Stacy ENVELOPE(-60.633,-60.633,-62.983,-62.983)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description On a recent visit to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, I lingered a little while longer than usual in my favorite exhibit: the Sant Ocean Hall (see oppo-site page). Wandering with no telos in mind, I let myself bask before bioluminescent beings, tremble in awe at the improbability of the extremophiles, and gaze up like a supplicant at the model of Phoenix, a North Atlantic right whale. Deeply affected by these strange strangers,1 I stretched my imagination towards the inconceivable and wondered at the sheer breadth of possibilities for ways of living in the still-occult thalassic regions of Earth’s oceans. I found solace in the evidence that so many vast and heterogeneous lives can flourish without the intrusive light of the sun or human reason, and that such animacy is possible in the darkness, which is, according to Stacy Alaimo, a “world where the Copernican revolution is irrelevant.”2 I then with some discomfort imagined myself embodying an oceanic form, imagined breathing without oxygen, thriving at thermal vents, and manifesting light with my own body. I imagined myself as an aqueous and somewhat amorphous body squeezed and strangled by the just bearable pressures of the deep sea. I attempted a posthumanist thought project similar to what Alaimo describes in “Violet-Black,” her contribution to Prismatic Ecology, in which she insists that “thinking with and through the elec-tronic jellyfish, seeing through the prosthetic eye, playing open-ended, improvisa-tional language games with deep-sea creatures, being transformed by astonishment and desire enact a posthumanist practice.”
format Book Part
author Montroso, Alan S.
spellingShingle Montroso, Alan S.
Ocean is the New East
author_facet Montroso, Alan S.
author_sort Montroso, Alan S.
title Ocean is the New East
title_short Ocean is the New East
title_full Ocean is the New East
title_fullStr Ocean is the New East
title_full_unstemmed Ocean is the New East
title_sort ocean is the new east
publisher punctum books
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.03
https://punctumbooks.com/titles/things-from-the-sea/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.633,-60.633,-62.983,-62.983)
geographic Stacy
geographic_facet Stacy
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic right whale
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic right whale
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.00
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.03
https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0182.1.00
_version_ 1766133796072062976