Contemporary public discourses about the ocean are routinely
characterized by scientific and environmentalist narratives that imagine
and idealize marine spaces in which humans are absent. In contrast, this
collection explores the variety of ways in which people have long made
themselves at home at sea, and continue to live intimately with it. In
doing so, it brings together both ethnographic and archaeological
research - much of it with an explicit Ingoldian approach - on a wide
range of geographical areas and historical periods.