Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles

This paper draws inspiration from the post-humanist feminist phenomenology of Neimanis in exploring how the polar areas can be made and maintained as planetary hydrocommons. What characterises the polar areas is ice. There, two thirds of Earth’s freshwater is held, 90% in Antarctica and 10% in Green...

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Main Author: Huijbens, E.H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-polar-hydrocommons-a-speculative-counter-cartography-of
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spelling ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/633882 2024-09-30T14:25:09+00:00 Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles Huijbens, E.H. 2024 https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-polar-hydrocommons-a-speculative-counter-cartography-of en eng https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-polar-hydrocommons-a-speculative-counter-cartography-of Wageningen University & Research Life Science Article in monograph or in proceedings 2024 ftunivwagenin 2024-09-03T23:49:52Z This paper draws inspiration from the post-humanist feminist phenomenology of Neimanis in exploring how the polar areas can be made and maintained as planetary hydrocommons. What characterises the polar areas is ice. There, two thirds of Earth’s freshwater is held, 90% in Antarctica and 10% in Greenland. This ice plays a profound role in global hydrological cycles, not least pertaining to human wellbeing. As such it is a coveted resource pegged for extraction in the race for the poles. At the same time, as part of the global hydrological cycle this ice is a planetary commons. This paper will employ the concepts of geo-power and the hydrocommons to explore how the icy nonhuman forcefulness of the poles infiltrates the way we can make sense of the poles. Through exploring counter-cartographic and sympoietic mappings of the Antarctic in particular, the paper illustrates how icy geopower intersects with aesthetics through the ways in which the polar ice is materially sensed and made sense of. This sense making is meant to counter the economic compulsion of extracting polar water or the appropriation of icy polar areas as wilderness for conservation. The terrain to be cultivated through the counter-cartographic presences are the commons sustaining already the ‘uncontained overflowing force’ of the multitude (Hard and Negri, 2017). These are commons instituting a scheme of open, shared use and democratic governance which can construct free human conviviality beyond the archaic and destructive pair of the private and the public. The paper claims that sensory mappings of differentiating icy geo-power can make for the polar areas as hydrocommons. The aim is thereby to mobilise politics and aesthetics of future tourism development for a planetary hydrocommons informing our culture and strategies for liveability on and of the Earth. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Greenland Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library Antarctic Greenland The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivwagenin
language English
topic Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Huijbens, E.H.
Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
topic_facet Life Science
description This paper draws inspiration from the post-humanist feminist phenomenology of Neimanis in exploring how the polar areas can be made and maintained as planetary hydrocommons. What characterises the polar areas is ice. There, two thirds of Earth’s freshwater is held, 90% in Antarctica and 10% in Greenland. This ice plays a profound role in global hydrological cycles, not least pertaining to human wellbeing. As such it is a coveted resource pegged for extraction in the race for the poles. At the same time, as part of the global hydrological cycle this ice is a planetary commons. This paper will employ the concepts of geo-power and the hydrocommons to explore how the icy nonhuman forcefulness of the poles infiltrates the way we can make sense of the poles. Through exploring counter-cartographic and sympoietic mappings of the Antarctic in particular, the paper illustrates how icy geopower intersects with aesthetics through the ways in which the polar ice is materially sensed and made sense of. This sense making is meant to counter the economic compulsion of extracting polar water or the appropriation of icy polar areas as wilderness for conservation. The terrain to be cultivated through the counter-cartographic presences are the commons sustaining already the ‘uncontained overflowing force’ of the multitude (Hard and Negri, 2017). These are commons instituting a scheme of open, shared use and democratic governance which can construct free human conviviality beyond the archaic and destructive pair of the private and the public. The paper claims that sensory mappings of differentiating icy geo-power can make for the polar areas as hydrocommons. The aim is thereby to mobilise politics and aesthetics of future tourism development for a planetary hydrocommons informing our culture and strategies for liveability on and of the Earth.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Huijbens, E.H.
author_facet Huijbens, E.H.
author_sort Huijbens, E.H.
title Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
title_short Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
title_full Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
title_fullStr Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Polar Hydrocommons : A speculative counter-cartography of the poles
title_sort exploring polar hydrocommons : a speculative counter-cartography of the poles
publishDate 2024
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-polar-hydrocommons-a-speculative-counter-cartography-of
geographic Antarctic
Greenland
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Greenland
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Greenland
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Greenland
op_relation https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-polar-hydrocommons-a-speculative-counter-cartography-of
op_rights Wageningen University & Research
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