Blogroll
- Critical Logistics
- Fabulous and weird website full of all sorts of info
- Geographical Imaginations
- International Transport Workers' Federation
- Middle East Report
- Object Lessons (on containers)
- Oceans Beyond Piracy
- Paleofutures – good tech stuff
- Port to port
- Progressive Geographies
- Sapping Attention
- STS Blog at Oxford
- The Funambulist
- Visual Complexity
Categories
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Archives
Category Archives: ports
“war, commerce, and transit”
“Let us have the courage to be crude: let us sweep the spirit of subtlety down the sewer along with the flags and the great warriors.” Paul Nizan Paul Nizan’s star burned bright and brief. He was a classmate of Jean-Paul Sartre‘s … Continue reading
Posted in empire, imperialism & colonialism, literature, Middle East, ports, readings, ships, war
Tagged Aden, Jean-Paul Sartre, Paul Nizan
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Edward Said on Cavafy in Alexandria
In his Reflections on Exile, Edward Said has a lovely elegiac essay called Cairo and Alexandria, which is an ode to Cairo and a eulogy for Alexandria. I love the bits that follow (and especially sympathise with the fear of consulates … Continue reading
Posted in empire, imperialism & colonialism, Middle East, ports, quotations
Tagged Alexandria, Cavafy, Edward Said
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“…We’re all exiles”
It’s at moments of misfortune that we remember we are all exiles (Total Chaos, p. 98) I first read about Marseilles when I was around 10 years old and someone gave me the Persian translation of The Count of Monte Cristo. … Continue reading
Posted in infrastructure, logistics, ports, readings, the sea
Tagged Jean-Claude Izzo, Marseilles
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LA/LB
There is an amazing bit in Alan Sekula‘s magisterial Forgotten Space where Angelenos of Latino origin sit at an outdoor space drinking beers and watching enormous container ships glide towards the unloading docks and cranes. Ever since watching that, I really wanted … Continue reading
Posted in Allan Sekula, infrastructure, logistics, militaries, political economy, ports, transport
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Piracy and Counter-piracy
There is a kind of romance around piracy. It is the romance of anti-authority figures and of a life lived not just in the margins but outside the boundaries. Just think about the masses of novels and films about piracy … Continue reading
Posted in finance and insurance, logistics, piracy, political economy, ports, readings, shipping conditions, ships, transport
Tagged Abdulaziz Al-Mahmoud, Erik Prince, Rose George, Simon Ings
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Beirut
Sitting on a rooftop overlooking container ships leaving the port of Beirut and sailing into the haze of the Mediterranean and other container ships powering towards the port from the west makes me VERY VERY happy I am going to … Continue reading
Posted in Middle East, ports, ships, the sea
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London comes closer to the sea
Dubai Ports World runs London Gateway which will be competing against Felixstowe and Southampton to be the top container port in the UK. Like many other DPW concerns, there seems to be an iron (or ham-) fisted determination to not let workers unionise – although … Continue reading
Posted in capital accumulation, infrastructure, labour, logistics, political economy, ports, shipping conditions, ships, transport
Tagged Gravesend, Iain Sinclair, Thames Gateway
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Regimes of land tenure
Regimes of land tenure and ownership must form significant elements in the development of ports. How quickly do these regimes change? What are the processes by which title deeds are issued, exchanged, bought, and sold? Are there demonstrable differences … Continue reading
Posted in capital accumulation, Middle East, political economy, ports
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The prose and poetry of toiling in/on the seas
I am ashamed to admit that I was a latecomer to the magic of Allan Sekula. Far too much of a latecomer. I discovered his stunning work on shipping and transport, last year; he died in August last year. His amazing … Continue reading
Posted in Allan Sekula, capital accumulation, labour, ports, readings, ships, the arts, the sea, the sublime, transport
Tagged Fish Story, Forgotten Spaces
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