• ‘A Kind of Sensory, Strange Thing to Experience’: Speaking Environmental Disaster in the Sea Empress Project Archive

    Author(s):
    Timothy Cooper (see profile)
    Date:
    2021
    Subject(s):
    Environmental conditions, Shipwrecks, Oral history
    Item Type:
    Article
    Tag(s):
    environmental history, everyday life
    Permanent URL:
    https://doi.org/10.17613/5pb5-aj54
    Abstract:
    This article explores embodied encounters with the Sea Empress oil spill of 1996 and their representation in oral narratives. Through a close reading of the personal testimonies collected in the Sea Empress Project archive, I examine the relationship between intense sensory experiences of environmental change and everyday interpretations of the disaster and its legacy. The art­icle first outlines the ways in which this collection of voices reveals sensory memories, embodied affects and narrative choices to be deeply entwined in oral representations of the spill, disclosing a ‘sensory event’ that created a powerful awareness of both environmental surroundings and their relationship to everyday social processes. Then, reading these narratives against-the-grain, I argue that narrators’ accounts tell a paradoxical story of a disaster that most now wish to forget, and reveal an ambivalent legacy of environmental change that is similarly consigned to the past. Finally, I relate this social forgetting of the Sea Empress to the wider history of environmental consciousness in modern Britain.
    Notes:
    Accepted version
    Metadata:
    Published as:
    Journal article    
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    3 months ago
    License:
    Attribution

    Downloads

    Item Name: pdf coopertc30sept.pdf
      Download View in browser
    Activity: Downloads: 121