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Crisis of meanings : divergent experiences and perceptions of the marine environment in Victoria, Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2005-12-01, 00:00 authored by Tanya KingTanya King
The oceans of the world are regularly depicted as under threat from human exploitation with the problem portrayed as being of 'global' concern. In a world market characterised by the division of labour, many of those who eat fish do so without directly experiencing the ocean as a domain of productive utility. Rather, their encounters are with representations that depict the 'natural' world as an aesthetic object of contemplation, and environmentalist discourses that identify human activities as' threatening marine ecosystems. So prevalent is this experience that tangible institutions, such as state fisheries management bodies, have emerged, acting to reinforce the ontology of this 'contemplated' ocean, giving weight to the illusion that humans can, and should, appreciate it only from afar. In this representation, commercial fishers are regularly depicted as transgressing a 'natural' boundary between humans and the environment. It is when the world is simultaneously encountered as an object of consumptive utility and aesthetic utility that the human role in the environment becomes ambiguous and a sense of crisis arises. This paper investigates disjunctions in experiences and understandings that contribute to environmental anxiety, and debates over the appropriate use of the ocean.

History

Journal

The Australian journal of anthropology

Volume

16

Issue

3

Pagination

350 - 365

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Location

Richmond, Vic.

ISSN

1035-8811

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Australian Anthropological Society

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