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How Water Remembers

Sediment, Time, and the Unquiet Past

In this final episode of the opening trilogy for the theme Hydropolitics: Water, Ontology of Law, Resources, and Necropolitics, we trace the forgotten currents of history carried in riverbeds and canal walls from the Indus Valley to the Thames, from imperial docks to pink dolphins and seals returning to once-toxic waters. This is a journey through sediment, memory, and design, where water is both archive and witness. We follow the lives displaced by infrastructure, the species surviving against industrial odds, and the ghosts of empire still embedded in our cities. As we meander back to the River Trent, we ask: what does water refuse to forget?

Thank you to the wider collective for supporting me with research, editing and for creating the space for me to meander!

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References

Indus River Dolphins

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/1/7/can-pakistans-indus-river-dolphins-be-saved

“I am going to the sea, clear the path”

Amazon River Dolphin

Pink river dolphin present in the Rupununi – research reveals

Otters

Otters spotted at National Trust's Calke Abbey for first time

West India Docks - Canary Wharf

London's Docks then and now

West India Docks - London Museum

The Zong Massacre Trial

Texts & Films

Colomina, B. and Wigley, M. (2016) Are We Human? Notes on an Archeology of Design. Zürich: Lars Müller Publishers.

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