User:Trashpuppy/TO
Thesis Proposal
Working Title: Seaing History
This thesis will blend critical speculative and essayistic fiction to recount the socio-economic development and colonial expansion of The Netherlands and the continued repercussion thereof, from the perspective of the sea. The sea, at once ancient and new every day, local and global, shapeshifting and plural, is a witness. Used and abused as an infrastructure for trade, transport (of data), and territorial expansion. A source of creation and destruction.
By adopting the sea as the perspective of this thesis, I aim to talk about history by presenting a subjective non-linear reflection on history. The text will make extensive use of footnotes, incorporating various sources and stories in a collagelike manner. This exploration will occur within the framework of 4 specific locations, each giving rise to an experimental essay. The following section presents a proposed point of departure for the poetic enquiry informing each of the essays.
Introduction: Water Memory
1 Rotta: The Deluge and the Dutch origin Myth
2 Delfshaven: The Tide - The Moon and the Market
3 Europort & Maasvlakte: Liquid land
4 NorthC: Clouded vision
Bibliography
- Coghlan, J.M. (2020). The Cambridge companion to literature and food. Chapter 11: Postcolonial Tastes. Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
- Geuze, A. & Koekebakker, O. (2005). The Flood : 2nd International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam ; catalogue ; [26 mei - 26 juni 2005]. Rotterdam: Internationale Architectuur Biënnale.
- Klose, A. (2016). Container Principle. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Mit Press.
- Lanchester, J. (2021). Gargantuanisation. [online] London Review of Books. Available at: https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v43/n08/john-lanchester/gargantuanisation [Accessed 15 Nov. 2021].
- Ocean Archive (2020) Corona under the Ocean. Episode 4: Water has Memory [Podcast]. TBA21–Academy and the Art Institute, FHNW Academy of Art and Design in Basel. Available from: https://ocean-archive.org/view/1401 [Accessed 27 Nov. 2021
- Sekula, A., Buchloh, B.H.D. and Kunsthalle Bielefeld (1995). Allan Sekula : fish story. Düsseldorf: Richter.
- Sparkly Kat, A. (2021). Post-colonial Astrology: Reading the Planets through Capital, Power and Labour.
- Taiwo, O. (2021). Our Planet Is Heating Up. Why Are Climate Politics Still Frozen? [online] The New Yorker. Available at: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/11/01/our-planet-is- heating-up-why-are-climate-politics-still-frozen-colonialism-environment [Accessed 4 Nov. 2021].
- THE FUNAMBULIST MAGAZINE. (2017). Students: Shipping Tales. [online] Available at: https://thefunambulist.net/magazine/09-islands/students-shipping-tales-christina- varvia [Accessed 3 Nov. 2021].
Annotated Bibliography
Write a concise annotation that summarizes the central theme and scope of the book or article. Include one or more sentences that (a) evaluate the authority or background of the author, (b) comment on the intended audience, (c) compare or contrast this work with another you have cited, or (d) explain how this work illuminates your bibliography topic.
- Sparkly Kat, A. (2021). Post-colonial Astrology: Reading the Planets through Capital, Power and Labour.
Sparkly Kat investigates western astrology through studying the etymology of the 7 most important planets. They unveil Western astrology, as an "anachronistic archive". It is a language saturated with romanticised images of Greco-Roman times. The West tries to revive itself again and again through these idealised images of Greece and Rome and a "claimed" Roman genealogy. In other words, the storytelling of these ideals still reinforces Western political ideals.
Sparkly Kat uses western astrology to respond to the west: astrology is here is used socio-politically, not psycho-analytically. It is a critical analysis of western astrology as a language and simultaneously a retelling and reshaping of this language.
My interest in this book is two-fold. Firstly, I think this post-colonial historical investigation mixed with a re-using and re-telling of the language is something closely associated to what I aim to do with my thesis. Re-casting a light on "Dutch" history. Secondly, with the second chapter (the etymology of the Moon) Sparkly Kat connects the Moon, ruling the tides, to the merchant - and later the (global) market. It is here that I have conceived a lot of the thoughts underpinning the second chapter of my thesis. What the Moon represents in western astrology, material fortune - monetary and the body, I think is very useful for me.