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“Dreams so Big Only the Sea Can Hold Them†: Man-Made Islands as Anxious Spaces, Cultural Icons, and Travelling Visions

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  • Mark Jackson
  • Veronica della Dora

Abstract

This paper explores a new phenomenon which is assuming global proportions: the planning and construction of artificial islands. Varying in size, shape, and purpose, man-made islands are looming on the horizons of an increasing number of aspiring global cities and regions at the margins of global capitalism. From the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea, from the Caribbean to the North Sea, artificial islands are increasingly embraced as spectacular, technical signifiers of global participation and urban economic progress: as the ‘new cultural icons’. Appropriated in different contexts, island projects, however, can be (and are) also resignified. They thus change in form, meaning, and use. While islands have been objects of renewed interest in cultural and historical geography, surprisingly, these new man-made landforms seem to have gone largely unnoticed. This paper suggests a research agenda to engage with artificial islands as a new ‘metageographical’ category of emergent, yet historically resonant, social space.

Suggested Citation

  • Mark Jackson & Veronica della Dora, 2009. "“Dreams so Big Only the Sea Can Hold Them†: Man-Made Islands as Anxious Spaces, Cultural Icons, and Travelling Visions," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 41(9), pages 2086-2104, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:41:y:2009:i:9:p:2086-2104
    DOI: 10.1068/a41237
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Tim Bunnell & Hamzah Muzaini & James D. Sidaway, 2006. "Global City Frontiers: Singapore's Hinterland and the Contested Socio‐political Geographies of Bintan, Indonesia," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 30(1), pages 3-22, March.
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