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Hydropoetics

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A study of human-water-power relationships in Eastern European cultures: an important contribution to the vibrant field of blue humanities.
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  • 27 January 2026
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Water is our most precious resource and an element of culture historically charged with diverse meanings and values. Through the symbolic realms of literature, film, and visual arts, the contributors to this volume explore how the humanities can contribute to a critical understanding of human-water-power relationships and transform the debates on water dominated by natural sciences and techno-economical concerns. Examining the underrepresented cultural arenas in the socialist spaces of Eastern Europe, they focus on a variety of media and artistic practices. The late socialist era manifests as formative for the environmental discourses tied into local political and social contexts.
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Price: $55.00
Pages: 300
Publisher: transcript publishing
Imprint: transcript publishing
Series: Literary Ecologies
Publication Date: 27 January 2026
Trim Size: 9.45 X 6.10 in
ISBN: 9783837673579
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / European / Eastern (see also Russian & Soviet), SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism

Jana Rogoff (Edited by)
Jana Rogoff is an assistant professor at the Department of Film Studies at the Charles University in Prague. She conducts research in theory and history of animation, Eastern European film, film sound, and ecocinema studies. She is a member of the Society for Animation Studies, the scientific network Animation and Contemporary Media Culture and the research group Environmental Humanities Prague.


Susanne Frank (Edited by)
Susanne Frank holds the chair of East Slavic literatures and cultures at the Institute for Slavic Studies at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. In her research she focuses on (post)Soviet literatures in (post)imperial contexts, concepts of national literatures and world literature, literature and nation-building in imperial and Soviet contexts, modes of transnational and translingual writing, as well as on the history of literary and cultural theory.