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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Fiona Polack , Danine FarquharsonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.421kg ISBN: 9780367903923ISBN 10: 036790392 Pages: 274 Publication Date: 20 December 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Heading Offshore: Introducing Cold Water Oil, Fiona Polack and Danine Farquharson 2. ""We Are Torn About Our Future:"" Big Oil and Iñupiaq Community Health in Arctic Alaska, Chie Sakakibara and Rosemary Ahtuangaruak 3. Encountering the Nonhuman in North Atlantic Oil Catastrophes, Fiona Polack 4. Dynamic Positioning: North Sea Petroculture’s Backwash, Graeme Macdonald 5.The Call of Cthoilu: The Weird Subject of Cold Water Oil, Jason Haslam 6. Contested and Emergent Futures: Film and Energy Regimes of the Newfoundland Offshore, Rachel Webb Jekanowski 7. Dispatches from Two Cold Water Oil Cultures: Norway and Newfoundland and Labrador, Brigt Dale and Danine Farquharson 8. Art and the Offshore, Sue Jane Taylor 9. Time for Oil: Competing Petrotemporalities in Norway’s Lofoten/Vesterålen/Senja Archipelago, Berit Kristoffersen, Gavin Bridge, and Philip Steinberg 10. From Land to Polar Sea: Russia’s Ill-Starred Quest for a New Petroleum Province in the Arctic Offshore, Nina Poussenkova 11. Svalbard and Oil: Dangerous games in the Arctic?, Helge Ryggvik 12. Raw, Dense, and Loud: A Whale’s Perspective on Cold Water Energy, Amy DonovanReviews""The oceans are one of the world’s most important sites of oil extraction. Yet far too little attention has been paid to the histories and narratives produced by offshore extraction. Danine Farquharson and Fiona Polack’s marvelously curated collection of essays offers readers the first extended exploration of the lives formed around and shaped by the encounter of sea and oil. Cold Water Oil is an instant classic. From its field-defining introduction to its wonderful concluding essay, which offers a whale’s view of extraction, this book shows us what environmental and energy studies miss when they fail to critically explore what lies under the surface. A thrilling read for anyone interested in the complex cultures of energy."" Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures: Globalization, Culture, and Energy and Climate Critic for the Green Party of Canada ""Cold Water Oil illuminates the often-hidden realities of offshore oil development. Far from sight, out to sea and deep beneath the ocean, countries around the North Atlantic are scraping the bottom of the barrel for short-term economic gain. Here Polack and Farquharson gathered an interdisciplinary group of contributors to weave a fuller understanding of offshore oil extraction and its distressing impacts. Together they present case studies from Canada, Norway, the UK, Russia, and the US that draw insights from across ecology, politics, culture, and history. Cold Water Oil is a gripping and despairing-yet-hopeful volume. It confronts the most pressing dilemmas of our time while inspiring a more equitable energy future. It is a timely antidote to the 'clean oil' greenwashing used by governments and industry to convince us we have no other choice."" Angela Carter, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science & Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo, Canada, and author of Fossilized: Environmental Policy in Canada's Petro-Provinces ""Energy humanities finally takes to the sea in this important new collection of essays focused on offshore petroleum extraction. The authors disrupt the silencing of marine environments that accompanies the mare nullius logic of frontier extractivism. Cold Water Oil instead reconnects and reterritorializes these environments, placing more-than-human relations and energopolitical entanglements front and center in its accounts of the offshore as the frontlines of struggle over energy transition today. The volume brings the offshore back home, challenging us to expand our critical imagination to sound the watery depths and coasts of petromodernity."" Dominic Boyer, author of Energopolitics, 2021-22 Berggruen Fellow 2021-22, and Professor, Rice University, USA The oceans are one of the world's most important sites of oil extraction. Yet far too little attention has been paid to the histories and narratives produced by offshore extraction. Danine Farquharson and Fiona Polack's marvelously curated collection of essays offers readers the first extended exploration of the lives formed around and shaped by the encounter of sea and oil. Cold Water Oil is an instant classic. From its field-defining introduction to its wonderful concluding essay, which offers a whale's view of extraction, this book shows us what environmental and energy studies miss when they fail to critically explore what lies under the surface. A thrilling read for anyone interested in the complex cultures of energy. Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures: Globalization, Culture, and Energy and Climate Critic for the Green Party of Canada Cold Water Oil illuminates the often-hidden realities of offshore oil development. Far from sight, out to sea and deep beneath the ocean, countries around the North Atlantic are scraping the bottom of the barrel for short-term economic gain. Here Polack and Farquharson gathered an interdisciplinary group of contributors to weave a fuller understanding of offshore oil extraction and its distressing impacts. Together they present case studies from Canada, Norway, the UK, Russia, and the US that draw insights from across ecology, politics, culture, and history. Cold Water Oil is a gripping and despairing-yet-hopeful volume. It confronts the most pressing dilemmas of our time while inspiring a more equitable energy future. It is a timely antidote to the 'clean oil' greenwashing used by governments and industry to convince us we have no other choice. Angela Carter, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science & Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo, Canada, and author of Fossilized: Environmental Policy in Canada's Petro-Provinces Energy humanities finally takes to the sea in this important new collection of essays focused on offshore petroleum extraction. The authors disrupt the silencing of marine environments that accompanies the mare nullius logic of frontier extractivism. Cold Water Oil instead reconnects and reterritorializes these environments, placing more-than-human relations and energopolitical entanglements front and center in its accounts of the offshore as the frontlines of struggle over energy transition today. The volume brings the offshore back home, challenging us to expand our critical imagination to sound the watery depths and coasts of petromodernity. Dominic Boyer, author of Energopolitics, 2021-22 Berggruen Fellow 2021-22, and Professor, Rice University, USA The oceans are one of the world's most important sites of oil extraction. Yet far too little attention has been paid to the histories and narratives produced by offshore extraction. Danine Farquharson and Fiona Polack's marvelously curated collection of essays offers readers the first extended exploration of the lives formed around and shaped by the encounter of sea and oil. Cold Water Oil is an instant classic. From its field-defining introduction to its wonderful concluding essay, which offers a whale's view of extraction, this book shows us what environmental and energy studies miss when they fail to critically explore what lies under the surface. A thrilling read for anyone interested in the complex cultures of energy. Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures: Globalization, Culture, and Energy and Climate Critic for the Green Party of Canada Cold Water Oil illuminates the often-hidden realities of offshore oil development. Far from sight, out to sea and deep beneath the ocean, countries around the North Atlantic are scraping the bottom of the barrel for short-term economic gain. Here Polack and Farquharson gathered an interdisciplinary group of contributors to weave a fuller understanding of offshore oil extraction and its distressing impacts. Together they present case studies from Canada, Norway, the UK, Russia, and the US that draw insights from across ecology, politics, culture, and history. Cold Water Oil is a gripping and despairing-yet-hopeful volume. It confronts the most pressing dilemmas of our time while inspiring a more equitable energy future. It is a timely antidote to the 'clean oil' greenwashing used by governments and industry to convince us we have no other choice. Angela Carter, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science & Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo, Canada, and author of Fossilized: Environmental Policy in Canada's Petro-Provinces Energy humanities finally takes to the sea in this important new collection of essays focused on offshore petroleum extraction. The authors disrupt the silencing of marine environments that accompanies the mare nullius logic of frontier extractivism. Cold Water Oil instead reconnects and reterritorializes these environments, placing more-than-human relations and energopolitical entanglements front and center in its accounts of the offshore as the frontlines of struggle over energy transition today. The volume brings the offshore back home, challenging us to expand our critical imagination to sound the watery depths and coasts of petromodernity. Dominic Boyer, author of Energopolitics, 2021-22 Berggruen Fellow 2021-22, and Professor, Rice University, USA The oceans are one of the world's most important sites of oil extraction. Yet far too little attention has been paid to the histories and narratives produced by offshore extraction. Danine Farquharson and Fiona Polack's marvelously curated collection of essays offers readers the first extended exploration of the lives formed around and shaped by the encounter of sea and oil. Cold War Oil is an instant classic. From its field-defining introduction to its wonderful concluding essay, which offers a whale's view of extraction, this book shows us what environmental and energy studies miss when they fail to critically explore what lies under the surface. A thrilling read for anyone interested in the complex cultures of energy. Imre Szeman, author of On Petrocultures: Globalization, Culture, and Energy and Climate Critic for the Green Party of Canada Cold Water Oil illuminates the often-hidden realities of offshore oil development. Far from sight, out to sea and deep beneath the ocean, countries around the North Atlantic are scraping the bottom of the barrel for short-term economic gain. Here Polack and Farquharson gathered an interdisciplinary group of contributors to weave a fuller understanding of offshore oil extraction and its distressing impacts. Together they present case studies from Canada, Norway, the UK, Russia, and the US that draw insights from across ecology, politics, culture, and history. Cold Water Oil is a gripping and despairing-yet-hopeful volume. It confronts the most pressing dilemmas of our time while inspiring a more equitable energy future. It is a timely antidote to the 'clean oil' greenwashing used by governments and industry to convince us we have no other choice. Dr. Angela Carter, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science & Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo, and author of Fossilized: Environmental Policy in Canada's Petro-Provinces Energy humanities finally takes to the sea in this important new collection of essays focused on offshore petroleum extraction. The authors disrupt the silencing of marine environments that accompanies the mare nullius logic of frontier extractivism. Cold Water Oil instead reconnects and reterritorializes these environments, placing more-than-human relations and energopolitical entanglements front and center in its accounts of the offshore as the frontlines of struggle over energy transition today. The volume brings the offshore back home, challenging us to expand our critical imagination to sound the watery depths and coasts of petromodernity. Dominc Boyer, author of Energopolitics, 2021-22 Berggruen Fellow 2021-22, and Professor, Rice University Author InformationFiona Polack is Associate Professor in the Department of English at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, and Academic Editor at Memorial University Press. She researches and publishes in the fields of energy and environmental humanities, island studies, and settler colonial studies. She currently leads the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight project ""Oil Rigs and Islands"" (2020–25), which examines contemporary cultural figurations of place-making in the offshore world, and collaborates with Danine Farquharson on other energy humanities projects. Fiona Polack is co-author of After Oil (2016), with the Petrocultures Research Group. Her edited collection Tracing Ochre: Changing Perspectives on the Beothuk was published in 2018. Danine Farquharson is Associate Professor of English at Memorial University. Her early research focused on masculinity and violence in contemporary Irish literature and film. More recently, her interests are in energy humanities, specifically collaborating with Fiona Polack. Together, they examine how the North Atlantic offshore oil and gas industry is imagined in a wide range of high and popular contexts – everything from oil company websites, to visual art, to literary fiction. She is the co-editor of Shadows of the Gunmen: Violence and Culture in Modern Ireland and the co-founder with Julia Wright of Dalhousie University of SSHORE: Social Science and Humanities Ocean Research and Education. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |