Background
Coastal towns and villages have historically been places of work, pleasure and recuperation; working harbours often occupying a landscape attractive to visitors. But the balance has shifted. Diminishing fish stocks are impacting small-scale fishing (SSF) enterprises in locations which are also seeing a rise in the number of properties bought to let or as second homes.Supervisors
University of Hull
University of Liverpool
If you have any queries about this project, or the Living Well with Water Doctoral Focal Awards, please email livingwww@hull.ac.uk.
Project aims
This project aims to explore perceptions of fishermen and women as mediated through literature and other creative practices including art and song. Fictional portraits of the lone grizzled fisherman heroically battling against the elements to secure a harvest using simple and environmentally benign equipment can both positively influence non-specialist sympathies and distort lived realities. Contemporary fishers are as likely to be battling against socio-economic forces that cast aspersions on their lifestyle and force them out of their homes.
The exodus of fishers and related infrastructure is changing the nature of many coastal communities. But reading the world through literature and other creative artforms enables empathy, and this project explores how an understanding of ongoing debates about the management of our fisheries, and the impact this has on communities and cultures can be shaped by storytelling. Reading existing accounts of lives at sea in fiction, poetry or memoir, this project has scope to accentuate new voices and testimonies. Collectively, this work is poised to inform future policies of place: working to reconcile the needs of the fishing communities, tourism, and conservation.
About Living Well with Water
Interested in applying?
This PhD scholarship is part of the AHRC-NERC Living Well with Water Doctoral Focal Awards, a partnership between the Universities of Hull and Liverpool and the National Trust, the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) and Tate Liverpool. If you successfully apply for this project, you will be based at the University of Hull.
And if you’re ready to apply, download the Supplementary Application Form and submit it with your application through the University of Hull student portal.
