After the Tide: Radical Water and the Work of Staying

Autori

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37536/ECOZONA.2026.17.1.5989

Abstract

After the Tide: Radical Water and the Work of Staying is a hybrid piece that braids speculative storytelling, philosophical reflection, and blue ecologies to ask what it means to live and think after mass loss, when the element doing the counting is water. At a moment when extinction is increasingly framed through metrics, solutions, or future projections, the piece insists on a form capable of holding ethical refusal, material process, and lived encounter together, without collapsing one into the other. The text moves between geological deep time and present-day seas, from anoxic oceans in past extinction events to contemporary dead zones, kelp forests, coral nurseries, and the near-erasure of the vaquita porpoise. It approaches oceans and coastal waters as archives and agents, bodies that register extinction in oxygen, sediment, salinity, sound, and law. Kelp, otters, seagrass, corals, a documented narwhal–beluga hybrid, and collapsing fisheries are not illustrations but conceptual partners; each carries a claim about trophic cascades, enforcement failure, assisted evolution, and the politics of who gets to breathe. Formally, the piece moves like a tide: from first-person sensing, through episodic vignettes that stage different modes and limits of marine rewilding, toward a final insistence that regeneration does not redeem extinction. “Afterness” names the ethically intolerable fact that life reorganises anyway, and that our task is to respond without turning that reorganisation into consolation or permission. The text refuses both technocratic cure-talk and the romance of return. In dialogue with contemporary debates on marine rewilding and restoration, it imagines rewilding less as a return to an untouched past and more as a collaborative, water-led practice of altering the terms of use, so that self-organising, more-than-human futures can take hold again in damaged seas, without pretending that what is lost becomes acceptable.

 

 

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Biografia autore

Andrea Natan Feltrin, University of North Texas

Natan Feltrin, PhD (they/them), is an environmental philosopher working at the intersection of environmental ethics, multispecies studies, and environmental humanities. Their research explores vulnerability, embodiment, ecological relations, and multispecies justice, drawing on phenomenology, posthumanist theory, and interdisciplinary environmental research. They are the author of Rewilding Justice: From Human Supremacy to Multispecies Coexistence (forthcoming with Exeter University Press).

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Pubblicato

2026-04-30

Fascicolo

Sezione

Creative Writing and Arts