Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography Donovan ... · 18-S Watermarks: An Attempt at...

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2018-2019 HUMANITIES CENTER BROWN BAG SERIES Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography Donovan Hohn, English, Associate Professor For more info about the Humanies Center, call (313) 577-5471 or visit www.research2.wayne.edu/hum FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Donovan Hohn English Associate Professor Tuesday, September 18, 2018 12:30PM-1:30PM Rm. 2339 Faculty Administraon Bldg Yes, as everyone knows meditaon and water are wedded forever,Herman Melville writes in the opening chapter of Moby-Dick, and the history of nonficon—from Mark Twains Life on the Mississippi to Anne Carsons Kinds of Waterto Olivia Laings To the River—furnishes many meditave examples of literary hydrography, wring that is at once about water and watery, formally and styliscally fluid. Having gone swimming through that literature, I aempt to add to it, but I depart from the premise that in the 21st century, Americans drink from and bathe in a kind of River Lethe of our own making. Our aqueducts are buried underground. Our rivers, away from the downtown waterfronts, are hidden from view. What happens in our water treatment plants, as the crisis in Flint reminds us, has become for most of us mysterious. At a me when aquifers are running low, the drought-struck West is on fire, and the waterworks of America are in disrepair, our estrangement from water has consequences. A thirsty hydrography for the Anthropocene, informed by the environmental sciences and the environmental humanies as well as by the literary history of water wring, might, Id like to think, provide some slight correcve to our terrestrial vision, an andote to forgeng. Donovan Hohn is the author of Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea (Viking, 2011), an Associate Professor of English, and the coordinator Wayne States creave wring program. Image: hps:// www.artsy.net/ arst/arno-rafael -minkkinen-1 Image: hp:// www.gey.edu/ art/collecon/ objects/164571/ henry-p-bosse- mechanic's-rock- low-water- american-1889/

Transcript of Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography Donovan ... · 18-S Watermarks: An Attempt at...

Page 1: Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography Donovan ... · 18-S Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography Donovan Hohn, English, Associate Professor For more info about the

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Watermarks: An Attempt at Literary Hydrography

Donovan Hohn, English, Associate Professor

For more info about the Humanities Center, call (313) 577-5471 or visit www.research2.wayne.edu/hum

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Donovan Hohn

English

Associate Professor

Tuesday, September 18, 2018 12:30PM-1:30PM Rm. 2339 Faculty Administration Bldg

“Yes, as everyone knows meditation and water are wedded forever,” Herman Melville writes in the opening chapter of Moby-Dick, and the history of nonfiction—from Mark Twain’s Life on the Mississippi to Anne Carson’s “Kinds of Water” to Olivia Laing’s To the River—furnishes many meditative examples of literary hydrography, writing that is at once about water and watery, formally and stylistically fluid. Having gone swimming through that literature, I attempt to add to it, but I depart from the premise that in the 21st century, Americans drink from and bathe in a kind of River Lethe of our own making. Our aqueducts are buried underground. Our rivers, away from the downtown waterfronts, are hidden from view. What happens in our water treatment plants, as the crisis in Flint reminds us, has become for most of us mysterious. At a time when aquifers are running low, the drought-struck West is on fire, and the waterworks of America are in disrepair, our estrangement from water has consequences. A thirsty hydrography for the Anthropocene, informed by the environmental sciences and the environmental humanities as well as by the literary history of water writing, might, I’d like to think, provide some slight corrective to our terrestrial vision, an antidote to forgetting.

Donovan Hohn is the author of Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea (Viking, 2011), an Associate Professor of English, and the coordinator Wayne State’s creative writing program.

Image: https://

www.artsy.net/

artist/arno-rafael

-minkkinen-1

Image: http://

www.getty.edu/

art/collection/

objects/164571/

henry-p-bosse-

mechanic's-rock-

low-water-

american-1889/