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100 _aKim, John
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245 _aThe fourth coast, revisited
260 _bsage
_c2021
300 _aVol 8, Issue 3, 2021 : (241-249 p.).
520 _aThe author traveled for 2.5 months by canoe and other modes of transport down the entire length of the Mississippi River with the Mississippi. An Anthropocene River project. Reflecting on this journey, this essay revisits Catherine Brown and William Morrish’s 1991 essay, The Fourth Coast: An Expedition on the Mississippi River, in which Brown and Morrish document their research efforts to identify coherent anthropogenic structures and systems that could warrant the characterization of the Mississippi River as a Fourth Coast. To encourage a flourishing of overlapping multispecies life, the essay moves beyond their spatial reimagining by defining the “distributed nature of home” as a model for conceptualizing distributed spatialities and plural temporalities along the Mississippi River.
650 _aanthropocene,
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650 _a distributed habitat,
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650 _afourth coast,
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650 _amigratory ecology,
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650 _aMississippi river,
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650 _amultispecies kinship,
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650 _aplural temporalities,
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650 _aspatial differentiation,
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650 _aterritorialization,
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650 _aweb of care
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773 0 _010524
_915375
_dSage Pub. 2019 -
_tAnthropocene review/
_x2053-020X
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/20530196211044620
942 _2ddc
_cART
999 _c12931
_d12931