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The Sea John Mack

The Sea By John Mack

The Sea by John Mack


£19.95
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

The Sea: A Cultural History moves beyond conventional boundaries, using histories, maritime archaeology, biography, art history and literary sources to provide an innovative and experiential account of 'the great blue yonder'.

The Sea Summary

The Sea: A Cultural History by John Mack

'There is nothing more enticing, disenchanting, and enslaving than the life at sea' wrote Joseph Conrad. In The Sea: A Cultural History John Mack considers the ways in which human beings interact because of the sea, navigate their course across it, and live on and around it - whether promontories, estuaries, ports or coves. The Sea considers the characteristics of different seas and oceans and investigates how the sea is conceptualized in various cultures. It looks at the diversity of maritime technologies, especially the practice of navigation and the 'society' of the sea - in many cultures all-male, often cosmopolitan, always hierarchical. The separation of the sea and the land is evident in the use of different vocabularies for the same things, the change in a mariner's behaviour when on land for a period, and in the liminal status of points of interaction between the two realms, notably on beaches and at ports. Ships are also deployed in symbolic contexts on land from ship burials, such as that at Sutton Hoo, to ecclesiastical and public architecture. The two realms are thus in dialogue in both symbolic and economic terms, rather than irrevocably separated. In describing the diversities of maritime cultures, this book moves beyond conventional boundaries, using histories, maritime archaeology, biography, art history and literary sources to provide an innovative and experiential account of 'the great blue yonder'.

The Sea Reviews

'The ambition of this book is admirable, and Mack manages to achieve an astonishing amount in just a couple of hundred pages ... If there's an ounce of salt in your veins, please read The Sea: A Cultural History. It's learned, fluent and, just like its subject, suitably unpredictable.' - Geographical Magazine 'An inventive look at the oceans and their influence - as barriers, as sources of commerce, life and cultural inspiration - on human civilization and the relations among nations.' - LA Times 'John Mack's fascinating The Sea: A Cultural History brings an anthropologist's intellect to our engagement with the sea.' - Conde Nast Traveller 'a comprehensive survey of the ways in which human societies have interacted with the sea, that vast expanse which has both united and divided the human race ... I was intrigued by the chapter dealing with navigation and I learned so much from it about the fascinating history of the art and science of guiding a ship across the sea ... I defy any reader not to find this book interesting and informative.' - Canberra Times 'John Mack, has looked at the sea through the prisms of culture, literature, art and anthropology ... This is a wonderfully erudite study of the artistic and mythological influences of the sea, with references ranging from the usual suspects Shakespeare, Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad, J.M.W. Turner to such unseaworthy writers as diverse as Victor Hugo, Bruce Chatwin and Dr Samuel Johnson.' - Sydney Morning Herald 'This is a deeply learned book, looking at the oceans and the way sailors interact with them ... adds another dimension to the history of humanity on a part of the planet easily ignored.' - The Australian 'Mack's dry wonderment about the watery part of the globe smacks of learned curiosity of the eighteenth-century naturalist, enthralled by his subject; but unlike his twenty-first-century counterparts, Mack is too rigorous a thinker to universalize his curiosity ad absurdum ... his teasing out of how the sea is viewed in literature and the arts, from the prints of Hokusai to the writings of Jonathan Raban, are the finest points of this book.' - The New Republic 'The book is truly intelligent and international in its scope and a thorough engagement with it would benefit any serious scholar of the maritime world.' - Sea History Magazine With any luck, most of us will be at sea by now. Anyone who is not may like to put their noses into The Sea: A Cultural History which sets out to tell the story of seas as places in their own right rather than expanses of meaningless water separating chunks of useful land ... There is a lot to think about here, much of it expressed in new ways.' - Marine Quarterly '[Mack] interprets a great variety of observations with the insights of a confident anthropologist ... Mack's account is full of fascinating details and intriguing general speculations ... Having learned more about the sea, readers will find, oddly enough, that they know more about the land and even about themselves.' - Eastern Daily Press 'This is the book that I have been waiting for - an anthropologist's exploration of man's engagement with the sea. In this brilliant analysis John Mack shows us that innate inquisitiveness has driven humans to challenge the sea, creating one of the great dynamics energizing the human story. The Sea is essential reading for all with an interest in the remarkable story of humankind.' - Barry Cunliffe, University of Oxford 'I am a part of the sea and the sea is part of me, muses a Torres Straits elder, and John Mack brings readers to just such recognition of their own places in the world. In his able hands, seas become places and not merely The Great Between. They have their own histories, and demand sophisticated technologies of exploration, exploitation, and intellectual fathoming. Through many years of museum scholarship, Mack has perfected a grand, sweeping vision matched by delight in deepest detail, and here he tells compelling stories about ships as societies, sea gypsies, and the hundred named seamarks in open water known to residents of Mabuiag Island. Welcome aboard!' - Allen F. Roberts, Professor in the Department of World Arts and Cultures, University of California, Los Angeles

About John Mack

John Mack is Professor of World Art Studies at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of Museum of the Mind: Art and Memory in World Cultures (2003) and The Art of Small Things (2007).

Additional information

GOR005038744
9781861898098
1861898096
The Sea: A Cultural History by John Mack
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Reaktion Books
20110401
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Sea