Waters that matter: How human-environment relations are changing in high-Arctic Svalbard
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28875Dato
2022-12-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Sokolickova, Zdenka; Ramirez Hincapié, Esteban; Zhang, Jasmine; Lennert, Ann Eileen; Löf, Annette; van der Wal, RenéSammendrag
There is scientific consensus that the archipelago of Svalbard is warming up faster
than other parts of the planet. People who live in or regularly visit this part of the
European high Arctic observe and experience these changes in a subjective and relational manner. This article illustrates how perceptions of environmental change
are enmeshed with our ways of interacting with water(s) and dwelling in the landscape. What kind of water-related change do people talk about? How do changes
in the different water worlds matter? How does water help us portray what environmental change means? We show that “what” and “how” we know about
water(s) amidst change are in many ways inseparable. Our contribution offers a
benchmark for discussing water-related environmental change in Svalbard from a
perspective that goes beyond “what long-term monitoring tells us” towards “what bodies experience.” Through accounts shared mostly by scientists, technicians, and
tour guides, we explore notions of water in its various forms, such as sea ice, glaciers, rivers, the wetness of the tundra, snow, and weather phenomena including
rain. We focus on processes such as disappearing, melting, freezing, swelling, saturating, drying up, eroding, appearing, and threatening, and discuss what the observed and experienced changes mean for human-environment relations. Our interlocutors emphasize many facets of their relationship with the landscape, including identity, expectations, emotions, knowledge, and practices. Our study demonstrates how the experiential perspective is largely ordered and filtered through activities and practices, among which mobility and reading, or predicting, the landscape stand out as particularly important. Through a relational approach to
water(s) permeation, we apply Tim Ingold’s concept of taskscapes and his perspectives on dwelling to show how time scales and connection to place matter. We juxtapose scientific knowledge produced through long-term monitoring with experiential knowledge, and demonstrate their entanglement in the Svalbard context,
dominated by scientific ways of knowing.
Forlag
Slovene Anthropological SocietySitering
Sokolickova, Ramirez Hincapié, Zhang, Lennert, Löf, van der Wal. Waters that matter: How human-environment relations are changing in high-Arctic Svalbard. Anthropological Notebooks. 2022;28(3):74-109Metadata
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