Mini-Cluster Ships as Floating Transcultural Spaces (MC 12)

Coordination: Roland Wenzlhuemer, Alexander Zipf

In the context of maritime history, researchers interested in cross-cultural contact and transcultural phenomena have mostly focused their attention at port cities, ocean littorals and other liminal zones. The ship has hitherto been viewed as a facilitator enabling long-distance contacts, but not as a transcultural arena in its own right (in a more general context, the same applies to the ocean itself). This project sought to readjust this focus and direct scholarly attention to the historical actors onboard ships and the transcultural phenomena arising when (quite literally) being in transit. In doing so, it broke new ground in both maritime as well as transcultural history and established a new perspective on both these fields – as well as on their relation to each other.

Links

Transculturality in a Nutshell: Ships' Newspapers as Mirrors of Passenger Life on Intercontinental Steamers (MC 12.1)

An Integrated Web-Based Information And Analysis System For Historic Geodata: The Case of Lloyd’s Lists (MC 12.2)

Cultural Practices at Sea: Ships in Times of War and beyond (MC 12.3)