articleEnvironment and Planning D Society and SpaceMar 10, 2015GREEN OA

Wet Ontologies, Fluid Spaces: Giving Depth to Volume through Oceanic Thinking

Durham University · Aberystwyth University

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Abstract

This paper expands on recent attempts to destabilise the static, bordered, and linear framings that typify human geographical studies of place, territory, and time. In a world conceptualised as open, immanent, and ever-becoming, scholars have turned away from notions of fixity towards fluidity and flow, and, in so doing, have developed networked, ‘flat’ ontologies. Recent attempts have gone further, challenging the horizontalism inherent in such approaches by opening up a vertical world of volume. In this paper we contend that such approaches are still somewhat lacking. The vertical element of volume is all too often abstract and dematerialised; the emphasis on materiality that is typically used to rectify…

Citation impact

807
total citations
FWCI
155.40
Percentile
100%
References
71
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Materiality (auditing)
  • Temporality
  • Ontology
  • Ideal (ethics)
  • Epistemology
  • Aesthetics
  • Phenomenology (philosophy)
  • Foundation (evidence)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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