From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths

Characterization of the ocean as remote, extreme and inaccessible is cultural rather than absolute. Today we think about the sea, especially its depths, in similar terms as outer space or the Antarctic. While the profound depths constitute an extreme environment for human bodies, so can a few feet o...

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Main Author: Rozwadowski, Helen M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Array 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291
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spelling ftscholexchange:oai:ojs.scholarlyexchange.org:article/12291 2023-05-15T13:39:21+02:00 From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths Rozwadowski, Helen M. 2013-09-24 application/pdf https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291 eng eng Array https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291/8323 https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291 Coriolis: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies; Vol 4 No 1 (2013) 2163-8381 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2013 ftscholexchange 2023-01-04T07:16:27Z Characterization of the ocean as remote, extreme and inaccessible is cultural rather than absolute. Today we think about the sea, especially its depths, in similar terms as outer space or the Antarctic. While the profound depths constitute an extreme environment for human bodies, so can a few feet of water. The history of the ocean’s third dimension reveals different conceptions of the ocean’s depths at different times. The introduction of self-contained underwater breathing apparatus dramatically altered our human relationship with the depths in the 1950s. Formerly the turf of military frogmen and skin-diving spear-hunters, the undersea realm opened up to ordinary people: civilians, non-hunters, women, children, photographers, scientists, film-makers, treasure-hunters, and consumers of products advertised in conjunction with diving. During the first decade of undersea exploration, the underwater realm was transformed from a place of danger to a place of wonder. Early on, sharks and octopi were terrible monsters intent on attacking people, while the depths threatened divers with deadly “rapture of the deep.” After more people experienced the underwater world, and more was known about it, the conception of divable depths shifted to a place of mystery and wonder, accessible to women as well as men, and safe even for kids. This transformation – visible through advertisements, popular and scientific literature, diving training materials and movies and tv shows – was wrought by a combination of technological change, new scientific knowledge, and also simply the experiences of the increasingly large numbers of people who went undersea or wanted to do so. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Scholarly Exchange: E-Journals Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
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language English
description Characterization of the ocean as remote, extreme and inaccessible is cultural rather than absolute. Today we think about the sea, especially its depths, in similar terms as outer space or the Antarctic. While the profound depths constitute an extreme environment for human bodies, so can a few feet of water. The history of the ocean’s third dimension reveals different conceptions of the ocean’s depths at different times. The introduction of self-contained underwater breathing apparatus dramatically altered our human relationship with the depths in the 1950s. Formerly the turf of military frogmen and skin-diving spear-hunters, the undersea realm opened up to ordinary people: civilians, non-hunters, women, children, photographers, scientists, film-makers, treasure-hunters, and consumers of products advertised in conjunction with diving. During the first decade of undersea exploration, the underwater realm was transformed from a place of danger to a place of wonder. Early on, sharks and octopi were terrible monsters intent on attacking people, while the depths threatened divers with deadly “rapture of the deep.” After more people experienced the underwater world, and more was known about it, the conception of divable depths shifted to a place of mystery and wonder, accessible to women as well as men, and safe even for kids. This transformation – visible through advertisements, popular and scientific literature, diving training materials and movies and tv shows – was wrought by a combination of technological change, new scientific knowledge, and also simply the experiences of the increasingly large numbers of people who went undersea or wanted to do so.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rozwadowski, Helen M.
spellingShingle Rozwadowski, Helen M.
From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
author_facet Rozwadowski, Helen M.
author_sort Rozwadowski, Helen M.
title From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
title_short From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
title_full From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
title_fullStr From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
title_full_unstemmed From Danger Zone to World of Wonder: The 1950s Transformation of the Ocean’s Depths
title_sort from danger zone to world of wonder: the 1950s transformation of the ocean’s depths
publisher Array
publishDate 2013
url https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source Coriolis: the Interdisciplinary Journal of Maritime Studies; Vol 4 No 1 (2013)
2163-8381
op_relation https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291/8323
https://ijms.nmdl.org/article/view/12291
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