Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/4089
Title: A Third Wave of Remembering The Mediterranean Sea as a Septic Tank
Authors: Vitanza, Victor J.
Keywords: Mediterranean;Septic-skeptic;Latitudes-longitudes;Yet attitudes
Issue Date: 2018
Citation: Vitanza, V. J. (2018). A Third Wave of Remembering. The Mediterranean Sea as a Septic Tank. Journal of Mediterranean Knowledge-JMK, 3(1), 81-86.
Abstract: The argument focuses on the differences in methods of historiographies as put forth by David Abulafia and Fernand Braudel. Their object-of-study is the Mediterranean Sea. Abulafia focuses primarily on human beings making history, while Braudel focuses on the Sea making itself, not primarily, as Abulafia insists in his title “A Human History.” Their vocabulary, as assumed, focuses on latitudes and longitudes. In a radical turn, Kenneth Burke focuses on the third as attitudes toward history and on casuistic stretchings. Gregory Ulmer, following-rethinking Burke, develops para-methodologies in the entitlement of “MEmorial,” that also combines both horizontal-vertical histories. Ulmer’s thoughts piggy-back on Burke allowing also for the excluded third by way of the reality, as well as the metaphor, of the Mediterranean Sea, as a Septic Tank, with the casuistic stretching of the Sea, as a Skeptic Tank. Hence, the writing is better performed than a writing of exposition, which the latter would only be a performative contradiction!
URI: http://www.mediterraneanknowledge.org/publications/index.php/journal/issue/archive
http://elea.unisa.it:8080/xmlui/handle/10556/4089
http://dx.doi.org/10.26409/2018JMK3.1.05
http://dx.doi.org/10.14273/unisa-2300
ISSN: Issn 2499-930X
Appears in Collections:Vol 3, No 1 (2018): Mediterranean and Migrations

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