
This is me during the summer of 2006, climbing "over the top" on the Joseph Conrad in Mystic, CT.
At the Bottom of Shakespeare’s
Ocean

This book
explores how Shakespeare's plays understand the oceans as simultaneously historical
realities and symbolic forces. It's part of the Shakespeare Now! series, published by Continuum Press in London. It's available now worldwide.
Publisher's web page
Amazon page
Lost at Sea: The Ocean in the English Imagination, 1550 - 1750
at Folger Shakespeare Library, June 10 - September 4, 2010

The Bookfish (1627)
The New Thalassology
A term coined by Peregrine Horden
and Nicholas Purcell (from the Greek thalassos,
the sea), this phrase describes the efforts of
historians, literary scholars, ecologists, and other
writers and thinkers to “historicize the oceans” and
reconceive the relationship between human culture
and the largest natural object on our planet.
Blue Humanities
My own term for the newmaritime studies, "blue humanities" (which I used to call "blue cultural studies), argues that renewed attention to the oceans can change our understandings of literature and human culture.
Works-in-Progress in Blue Humanities
“Shipwreck and the Meanings of Ocean, 1552-1719”
This book examines representations of maritime disaster, from Hakluyt’s Principal
Navigations of the English Nation (1589) through
Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1719), in terms of changing ideas about the relationship between humanity
and nature in the early modern period.
The Hungry Ocean: Literary Culture and the Maritime Environment
John Carter Brown Library, April 22-23, 2011
A small academic conference in spring 2011 will bring together liteary scholars who are working, in different periods and sub-fields, on the relationship between the ocean and literature. Several events will also be geared toward undergraduates. Contributing institutions include the John Carter Brown Library, the Rumowicz Program in Literature and the Sea at URI, the Columbia University Seminars Office, and the American Friends of the Hakluyt Society.
Some Related Web Links
Williams
– Mystic
An undergraduate program
in maritime studies, created jointly by Williams
College and Mystic Seaport.
Mystic Seaport

The main site for Mystic’s open-air
museum and library.
Photo: Charles W. Morgan at Mystic Seaport
The
John Carter Brown Library

One of the premier maritme collections
in the United States. I was a Fellow here during the
2008-2009 academic year.
The National Maritime
Museum in Greenwich

The largest maritime museum in the
world, filled with many wonderful things, from Lord Nelson's bloody socks to Edward Barlow's manuscript account of his years at sea in the seventeenth century. I was a Fellow at the Caird Library here
during 2007-2008.
Oceans Connect
A
Ford Foundation-funded initiative at Duke University.

Steve Mentz
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