List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Life at Water’s Edge
Franz Krause and Mark Harris
Chapter 1. Displacing the Delta: Notes on the
Anthropology of the Earth’s Physical Features
Tanya Richardson
Chapter 2. The Global Swamp. Or, the Amphibious
as a Figure of Heterotopia
Lukas Ley
Chapter 3. Stagnation: Waterflows and the
Politics of Stranded Matter in La Mojana, Colombia
Alejandro Camargo
Chapter 4. Economy, Identity and Hydrology:
Toward a Holistic Approach to Intersecting Volatilities in the
Mackenzie Delta, Canada
Franz Krause
Chapter 5. ‘This Tide Will Be a Good Tide’: On
Movement, Anticipative Waiting and Tricking on the Islands of the
Parnaíba Delta, Brazil
Nora Horisberger
Chapter 6. Gleaning Time: Practice, Pause and
Anticipation in the Sine-Saloum Delta, Senegal
Sandro Simon
Chapter 7. Lived Histories of Flows and
Sediments in a Turkish Delta
Catarina Scaramelli
Chapter 8. Available, Yet Unavailable:
Anchoring Land in the Ayeyarwady Delta, Myanmar
Benoit Ivars
Conclusion: Confluences and Distributaries in
Delta Life
Franz Krause and Mark Harris
Index
Franz Krause is an anthropologist interested in the role of water in society and culture. He works as Junior Research Group Leader of the DELTA project at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology and the Global South Studies Center, University of Cologne, Germany.
“This volume does more than assemble ethnographic studies of delta inhabitants from around the world. It weaves their experience into a sustained reflection on life in a volatile world of islands, reedbeds, coasts and swamps, a world ever made, unmade and remade, as much by spirits as by people, and as much by states and markets as by the elements of air, earth and water. Here, the lens of the delta affords rare insight into what it means to live downstream.” • Tim Ingold, University of Aberdeen “Starting from the dynamic instability of river deltas as volatile biosocial entities, the contributors to this pioneering volume jolt us to rethink our ideas about coastal edges and the beings, matter, and practices through which they form and persist.” • Hugh Raffles, The New School “This is an original book that offers a variety of approaches to conceptualizing, empirically studying, and theorizing deltas as distinct sites of socio-material relations. The authors offer contrasting and complementing approaches that make the volume a useful introduction to the theme.” • Andrea Ballestero, Rice University “I think that the book is excellent and will make an important contribution to debates in the field.” • Jason Cons, University of Texas at Austin
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