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‘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:
- xml
- Published as:
- Journal article Show details
- Pub. DOI:
- doi.org/10.3197/096734021X16374109312191
- Publisher:
- White Horse Press
- Pub. Date:
- 2021-12-8
- Journal:
- Environment and History
- ISSN:
- 0967-3407
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 3 months ago
- License:
- Attribution
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‘A Kind of Sensory, Strange Thing to Experience’: Speaking Environmental Disaster in the Sea Empress Project Archive