ABSTRACT

This book is an anthology of key essays that foregrounds coasts, islands, and shorelines as central to the scholarship on the oceanic environment and climate across South Asia.

The volume is a collaborative effort amongst historians, anthropologists, and environmentalists to further understand the lifeworlds of the South Asian littoral that are neither fully aquatic or terrestrial, and inescapably both. Terra Aqua invokes a ‘third surface’ located in the interstice of land and water—deltas, estuaries, tidelands, beaches, swamps, sandbanks, and mudflats—and engages in a radical reconceptualization of coastal and shoreline terrains. The book explores uniquely endangered habitats and emergent templates of survival against rising seas and climatic disturbances with particular focus on the Bengal and Malabar coastlines.

A critical, transdisciplinary contribution to the study of climate change in South Asia, Terra Aqua examines salinity and submergence, coastal erosion, subterranean degradation, and the depletion of littoral lifeways impacting marine communities and biospheres. It will be of particular interest to scholars of environment studies, ecology and climate change in the Global South, hydrology, geography, ocean and island studies, environmental justice, colonialism, and imperial and maritime history.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|10 pages

A Monsoon Miracle

Naming and Knowing the Mudbanks of Malabar 1

chapter 3|13 pages

“Source to Mouth”

Engineers, Rivers, Coasts and the Bengal Delta (1750–1918)

chapter 4|26 pages

Living Paradox in Riverine Bangladesh

Whiteheadian Perspectives on Ganga Devi and Khwaja Khijir

chapter 5|17 pages

Earth, Water, Salt

Amphibious Pasts of the Lower Gangetic Delta 1