Aqua Firma/Incognita/Communi

Item

Title
Aqua Firma/Incognita/Communi
Description
This thesis drifts into the ocean’s dark, turbulent depths to envision how urbanized seas erode landed geologics. Modernity has figured the ocean as an unknowable expanse opposed to land yet suffuse with extractable resources. In this way, the ocean has played backdrop for contested visions: as a space of biopolitical mobility as well as competition for natural resources and the policing of political borders. The 1982 United Nations Convention of the Law of the Seas (U.N.C.L.O.S.) attempted to reconcile these conflicting seascapes through the international legal principal of res communis, or “the common heritage of mankind.” Ultimately, this thesis portrays the ocean-as-commons through the Blake Plateau, a deep-sea landform 300 miles off the southeast coast of the United States currently subject to aggressive prospecting for rare earth minerals. The site acts as the locus of the Ocean Column Observatory (O.C.O.), a multi-scalar assemblage of decommissioned maritime infrastructure that supports vibrant relations between life and matter. Imagining new ways of inhabiting the ocean necessarily entails creating new representations attuned to watery ways of seeing landscape.
Creator
Smith-Holmes, Maxwell Nathan
Subject
Biofoul
Blue humanities
Fluidity
Naval architecture
Oceans
UNCLOS
Landscape architecture
Environmental studies
Design
Contributor
Monacella, Rosalea
Date
2021-05-21T13:53:47Z
2021
2021-05-19
2021-05
2021-05-21T13:53:47Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/octet-stream
Identifier
Smith-Holmes, Maxwell Nathan. 2021. Aqua Firma/Incognita/Communi. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28541404
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367637
Language
en