Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic

This paper considers the Anthroposcenic, whereby landscape becomes emblematic of processes marking the Anthropocene, through a specific site, Eccles on the northeast coast of Norfolk, England. The coast has become a key landscape for reflections on the Anthropocene, not least through processes of er...

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Main Author: Matless, David
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51921/
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author Matless, David
author_facet Matless, David
author_sort Matless, David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper considers the Anthroposcenic, whereby landscape becomes emblematic of processes marking the Anthropocene, through a specific site, Eccles on the northeast coast of Norfolk, England. The coast has become a key landscape for reflections on the Anthropocene, not least through processes of erosion and sea level change; the title phrase ‘next the sea’ here carries both spatial and temporal meaning. Through Eccles the paper investigates cultural-historical Anthropocene signatures over the past two centuries. Between 1862 and 1895 a church tower stood on Eccles beach; in preceding decades the tower was half-buried in sand dunes, but emerged after these were eroded by the sea. In 1895 the tower fell in a storm, although fragments remained intermittently visible over the following century, depending on the state of the beach. The paper takes Eccles tower as a focus for the exploration of themes indicative and/or anticipatory of the Anthropocene, including sea defence and geological speculation on land and sea levels, Eccles featuring in Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology. The tower became a visitor attraction, and discussions around the 1895 fall are examined, in relation to the spectacle of ruin, claims over the site, and anxieties over defence. The periodic beach exposure of bones from the former churchyard prompted reflections on mortality, also present in literary engagements with Eccles by figures such as Henry Rider Haggard. The paper traces the persistence of fragmentary ruin memory through twentieth-century sea defence initiatives, and the ways in which late twentieth-century concerns for climate change and sea level rise generated a rediscovery of the site, yet also led to its effective disappearance as the beach built up following new sea defence construction. Eccles beach speaks to twenty-first-century preoccupations, aspects of its history over two hundred years making it emblematically Anthroposcenic.
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spelling nottingham-519212020-05-04T19:50:19Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51921/ Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic Matless, David This paper considers the Anthroposcenic, whereby landscape becomes emblematic of processes marking the Anthropocene, through a specific site, Eccles on the northeast coast of Norfolk, England. The coast has become a key landscape for reflections on the Anthropocene, not least through processes of erosion and sea level change; the title phrase ‘next the sea’ here carries both spatial and temporal meaning. Through Eccles the paper investigates cultural-historical Anthropocene signatures over the past two centuries. Between 1862 and 1895 a church tower stood on Eccles beach; in preceding decades the tower was half-buried in sand dunes, but emerged after these were eroded by the sea. In 1895 the tower fell in a storm, although fragments remained intermittently visible over the following century, depending on the state of the beach. The paper takes Eccles tower as a focus for the exploration of themes indicative and/or anticipatory of the Anthropocene, including sea defence and geological speculation on land and sea levels, Eccles featuring in Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology. The tower became a visitor attraction, and discussions around the 1895 fall are examined, in relation to the spectacle of ruin, claims over the site, and anxieties over defence. The periodic beach exposure of bones from the former churchyard prompted reflections on mortality, also present in literary engagements with Eccles by figures such as Henry Rider Haggard. The paper traces the persistence of fragmentary ruin memory through twentieth-century sea defence initiatives, and the ways in which late twentieth-century concerns for climate change and sea level rise generated a rediscovery of the site, yet also led to its effective disappearance as the beach built up following new sea defence construction. Eccles beach speaks to twenty-first-century preoccupations, aspects of its history over two hundred years making it emblematically Anthroposcenic. Elsevier 2018-10 Article PeerReviewed Matless, David (2018) Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic. Journal of Historical Geography, 62 . pp. 71-84. ISSN 0305-7488 Anthroposcenic Anthropocene coast landscape Eccles https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305748817302748 doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2018.05.013 doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2018.05.013
spellingShingle Anthroposcenic
Anthropocene
coast
landscape
Eccles
Matless, David
Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title_full Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title_fullStr Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title_full_unstemmed Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title_short Next the Sea: Eccles and the Anthroposcenic
title_sort next the sea: eccles and the anthroposcenic
topic Anthroposcenic
Anthropocene
coast
landscape
Eccles
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51921/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51921/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51921/