Strang, Veronica. "Substantial Connections: Water and Identity in an English Cultural Landscape." Worldviews 10, no. 2 (2006): 155-77.
Abstract
As
a material substance, essential to every organic process, water
literally
constitutes human "being", providing a vital "natural
symbol" of sociality and of human-environmental interdependence. Its
particular qualities of fluidity and transmutability lend themselves to
a
stream of metaphors about flows and interconnections, and to ideas
about
spatio-temporal change and transformation. Moving constantly between
internal
and external environments, water facilitates scheme transfers between
conceptual models of physiological, social and ecological processes.
Representing "orderly" flows and balances in each of these; it is
vulnerable to pollution at various levels, with concerns about material
pollution readily transferred to ideas about social and cultural
disorder. In
particular, metaphors employing water imagery dominate discourses about
individual and cultural identities and the maintenance—or
dissolution—of social
boundaries.
Based on ethnographic research in
Dorset,
this paper explores these themes and considers how human engagements
with
water—in the home, and through interaction with rivers and water supply
infrastructure—mediate individual, familial and wider collective
identities in
a shifting cultural "fluidscape" of social, spatial, economic and
political relationships. It suggests that, in a post-modern social
milieu,
images of water and identity vie with more grounded metaphors of
landscape,
place and location, assisting debates about the potential for fluidity
in human
constructions of identity.