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Salt rhyne; brackish methodologies, liquid knowledge and slow seeping

Goddard, Rebecca

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Abstract

Set within an eco-feminist praxis of matter, fluidity, care and porousity, this paper considers how brackish waters, as slow sites of exchange, offer new ways of thinking about methodological ‘slow attention’ in critical photographic landscape practice.

As a form of re-attunement to the world, a desire to ‘slow’ can invoke temporal understandings about ecologies and matter to open up possibilities for change against ecological damage. This paper is focussed upon slow work made in an industrial area of Avonmouth in the South West of England, close to the tidal River Severn / Afon Hafren.

This site is criss-crossed by ancient drainage channels called rhynes (‘ri:n/ “reen”; from Old English ryne or Welsh rhewyn or rhewin ‘ditch’), which interconnect as watery grids to become sites of exchange between saline and fresh water, particulate and liquid, and pollutant and actant, in a slow, brackish mingling.

Developing practice research in this site, and, I argue, within an exchange of slow, brackish methodologies, means that kinships and more-than-human awareness begin to ‘seep’ into existence.

This paper outlines how these slow, methodological exchanges mingle with one another, to implicate material agency in the work, critiquing dominant orientations, (Ahmed, 2006), and contest notions of waste, value, discard and return (Leroy, 2017), through slow pinhole exposures, sound recording and writing.

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name London Conference for Critical Thoughts
Start Date Jun 28, 2024
End Date Jun 29, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 19, 2024
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Keywords porosity, phenomenology, brackish, photographic materiality
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/12004549





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