Shifting Currents is an original and comprehensive history of swimming. It examines the tension that arose when non-swimming northerners met African and Southeast Asian swimmers. Using archaeological, textual and art historical sources, Karen Eva Carr shows how the water simultaneously attracted and repelled these northerners - swimming seemed uncanny, related to witchcraft and sin. Europeans used Africans' and Native Americans' swimming skills to justify enslaving them, but northerners also wanted to claim water's power for themselves. They imagined that swimming would bring them health and demonstrate their scientific modernity. This unresolved tension still sexualizes women's swimming and marginalizes Black and Indigenous swimmers today. The history of swimming is a new lens through which to gain a clearer view of race, gender and power on a centuries-long scale.
About the AuthorKaren Eva Carr is Associate Professor (Emerita) in the Department of History at Portland State University, and her books include Vandals to Visigoths: Rural Settlement Patterns in Early Medieval Spain (2002).
Book InformationISBN 9781789145786
Author Karen Eva CarrFormat Hardback
Page Count 304
Imprint Reaktion BooksPublisher Reaktion Books