The Underharbor: Submerged Histories of Sydney

£92.00

Available for Pre-order. Due September 2026.

The Underharbor: Submerged Histories of Sydney Author: Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: The University of Chicago Press
string(3) "288"
Pages: 288 Illustrations and other contents: 15 color plates, 50 halftones Language: English ISBN: 9780226851976 Categories: , , , ,

An underwater look at Sydney that surfaces new and unfamiliar histories of people, objects, spaces, and environmental and social change. The Underharbor places the ocean at the center of a cultural history of Sydney, Australia, a place built on and around seawater, where the community is linked historically, emotionally, and psychologically to the water. Drawing on a series of vignettes that focus on Sydney’s underwater dimensions—including the harbor’s relationship to technological modernity, Indigenous ideas and practices, artistic experimentation, and scientific inquiry—Ann Elias creates a unique portrait of a city and its past. By shifting the terrestrial perspective to the subaquatic, Elias uncovers an area filled with political meaning, poetic significance, and ideological struggles. Few harbors are as researched as Sydney’s, where fishing, exploration, colonialism, warfare, science, and industry all shaped cultural ideas about underwater space. Between 1850 to 1950, only a few groups of people had access to the remote underharbor: Indigenous divers and First Nations peoples, who were dispossessed by colonizers; divers working primarily to further the maritime industrialization of the growing city and to salvage objects from the harbor floor; researchers in the emerging field of marine science who dove for first-hand observation; and beachcombers, naturalists, and dredgers who got to know the underharbor by bringing it to the surface. Through press stories, models, illustrations, maps, and photographic and cinematic representations, The Underharbor reveals how these watery visions of Sydney shifted over the course of a century.

Weight0.454 kg
Author

Editor
Photographer
Format

Illustrators
Publisher

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

“Descending into Sydney Harbor, Elias composes an extensively researched, lavishly detailed, and generously illustrated study of this undersea site, through multiple perspectives and many decades. Elias analyzes Indigenous knowledges and diving practices, settler labor practices, marine zoology, journalism, photography, paintings, radio, and cinema, elegantly attending to the tensions between fact and fantasy, cultural imaginaries and the material environment. This overlooked aquatic place, as it turns out, harbors capitalism, colonialism, mastery, maritime salvage, Romantic aestheticism, alienation, fantasy, monsters, melancholy, macabre corpses, leaping mollusks, and feminized cephalopods. This vivid, readable book is a model for research that illuminates the rich, multifarious, and often surprising underwater histories that saturate places we presumed we already knew.” -- Stacy Alaimo, author of “The Abyss Stares Back: Encounters with Deep Sea Life” “Drawing on multiple interdisciplinary sources—art history, film, photography and literature, as well as archaeology and environmental sciences—Elias offers unusual angles on what she calls the ‘uncanny place’ beneath the surface of Sydney Harbor. Her argument also suggests more generally how the enigmatic undersea has functioned as ‘the planet’s last unknown frontier.’ Written in an engaging style with multiple illustrations, The Underharbor dredges to the surface many concealed aspects of this submarine realm and radiantly illuminates ‘the cultural importance of ocean depths’ in our own time.” -- Paul Giles, author of “Backgazing: Reverse Time in Modernist Culture”

Author Biography

Ann Elias is professor emeritus of art history and visual culture at the University of Sydney. She is the author of Coral Empire: Underwater Oceans, Colonial Tropics, Visual Modernity; Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art; and Camouflage Australia: Art, Nature, Science, and War.