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Signs of Water: I. Immersions:

Signs of Water
I. Immersions:
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table of contents
  1. Half Title Page
  2. Series Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Foreword
  8. Acknowledgements
  9. Introduction
  10. I. Immersions:
  11. Introduction
  12. Water Imagination in Anthropology: On Plant Healing Matters
  13. Aquatic Insights from Roger Deakin’s Waterlog
  14. II. Formations:
  15. Introduction
  16. Water Formations, Water Neutrality, and Water Shutoffs: Posthumanism in the Wake of Racial Slavery
  17. When Water Isn’t Life: Environmental Justice Denied
  18. Indigenous Stories and the Fraser River: Intercultural Dialogue for Public Decision-Making
  19. III. Histories:
  20. Introduction
  21. Unexpected Connections? Water Security, Law, Social Inequality, Disrespect for Cultural Diversity, and Environmental Degradation in the Upper Xingu Basin
  22. Community-Based Natural Resources Management in Sub-Saharan Africa: Barriers to Sustainable Community Water Supply Management in Northwest Cameroon
  23. Taming the Tambraparni River: Reservoirs, Hydro-Electric Power Generation, and Raising Fish in South India
  24. A Tale of Two Watersheds in the Mackenzie River Basin: Linking Land Use Planning to the Hydroscape
  25. IV. Interventions:
  26. Introduction
  27. On Not Having Invented the Wheel: A Meditation on Invention, Land, and Water
  28. Instructions for Being Water: A Performance Score
  29. The Red Alert Project
  30. V. Responses:
  31. Introduction
  32. Ghost Story: A Community Organizing Model of Changemaking
  33. The New Thunderbirds: The Waters of Uranium City, Saskatchewan
  34. VI. IMPLEMENTATION:
  35. Introduction
  36. Large-Scale Water Harvesting: An Application Model in the Time of Accelerating Global Climate Change
  37. Contributors

I. Immersions:

From Water Imaginaries to Wild Swimming

A still body of water in the middle of the view is bookended with many small and large shoreline rocks resting in the foreground. A rounded mountain sits in the background with a dark and cloudy sky above. The mood is quiet but foreboding. This image was gathered where the Silverton Creek empties into Lake Slocan in British Columbia.

Photo courtesy Robert Boschman

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© 2022 Robert Boschman and Sonya L. Jakubec
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