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Flowing progress : transforming the Danube through infrastructure / edited by Stefan Dorondel and Luminita Gatejel.

Van Pelt Library DB446 .F569 2025
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Dorondel, Ștefan, 1968- contributor, editor.
Gatejel, Luminita, contributor, editor.
Akto, Deniz Armagăn, contributor.
İnal, Onur, 1979- contributor.
Ardeleanu, Constantin, contributor.
Jobbitt, Steven, contributor.
Șerban, Stelu, contributor.
Nemes, Robert, contributor.
Iordachi, Constantin, contributor.
Prokić, Milica, contributor.
Haidvogl, Gertrud, contributor.
Hohensinner, Severin, contributor.
Schmid, Martin, 1974- contributor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Water resources development--Danube River.
Water resources development.
Infrastructure (Economics)--Europe, Eastern.
Infrastructure (Economics).
Infrastructure (Economics)--Europe, Central.
Geopolitics--Danube River Region.
Geopolitics.
Danube River--History.
Danube River.
Physical Description:
xiv, 324 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
West Lafayette, Ind. : Purdue University Press, 2025.
Summary:
"Flowing Progress: Transforming the Danube Through Infrastructure focuses on how different political regimes and forms of governance have imagined and technologically transformed the most international river in the world. Multidisciplinary and drawing on methodologies of history, anthropology of infrastructure, and science, technology, and society, this collection explores the tensions between the river and its natural pulses, the humans that populate its floodplains, state agencies, and infrastructure. The book engages the concept of disturbance to point out the circular and spiraling dynamics between hydrological processes and technopolitical and economic practices. Disturbance denotes a specific type of long-term dynamic between human attempts to control the Danube, the material systems they implemented to achieve these goals, and the agency of the river that both enabled the functioning of infrastructure and the breakdown of such arrangements. It draws particular attention to the concerted efforts to contain and optimize the Danube's flow, adding layer after layer of dams, channels, and pipes that could potentially escalate the power of a leashed river. Taking a longer historical perspective from the sixteenth century until today, the volume provides a variety of relevant case studies and local contexts in the Ottoman and Habsburg empires, and their successor states Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, and Serbia which show different ways of how humans have imagined and coped with this mighty river." -Back cover.
Contents:
Preface / Stefan Dorondel and Luminita Gatejel
Introduction: Disturbance: Danube River, infrastructure, state / Stefan Dorondel and Luminita Gatejel
Coping with the River: Nature, empire, and the making of the early modern Ottoman Danube / Deniz Armağan Akto and Onur İnal
A young state empowered by technology? Floods and the politics of responsibility in Wallachia during the 1840s / Luminita Gatejel
Free from hindrances: shipping and fishing mobility systems in the Danube Delta Region (1856-1914) / Constantin Ardeleanu
A watershed crisis: Hydrology and the politics of revisionism in the Post-Trianon Hungary / Steven Jobbitt
Floods and the affective state on the Bulgarian Lower Danube / Stelu Șerban
The other 1956: The Danube and flood narratives in Hungary / Robert Nemes
Socialist infrastructure and its afterlife: Romania's Danube-Black Sea Canal / Constantin Iordachi
The ethnography of a flood and the failure of infrastructure / Stefan Dorondel
The specter of infrastructure over Belgrade's urban oasis: The layered past and the uncertain future of the Great War Island / Milica Prokić
Disturbance on the Upper Danube: A long-term socio-ecological perspective on floods / Gertrud Haidvogl, Severin Hohensinner, and Martin Schmid
Index
About the contributors
ISBN:
1626711178
9781626711174
162671116X
9781626711167
OCLC:
1452588812

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