Harvesting the Sea in Southeastern Arabia
Volume 1: Regional Studies
Language
EnglishAbstract
Traditional livelihoods and the ecosystems that sustain them are dying out around the world. This book is a collection of research on the relationships between people, their environment, their expertise and their languages along the ecologically fragile coasts of the Arabian Peninsula. These studies are the outcome of many years of collaborative fieldwork with local communities in three main regions of southern and eastern Arabia: the Musandam Peninsula, Dhofar and al-Mahrah, and the island of Soqotra. Bringing together oral literature, traditional scientific knowledge, and marine subsistence at the peripheries of the Arabian seaboard, the volume makes a major contribution to the documentation of the indigenous Modern South Arabian languages (MSAL), regional Arabic, and the Kumzari language, as well as to a greater understanding of their speakers’ mastery in harvesting the seas. Diverse contributions by scholars and language community members explore the songs and stories, experiences and viewpoints of indigenous fishers, and shed light on the cultural significance of the maritime species encountered by each community. This book is a testimony to resilient ways of life, many of which have vanished, but which at the same time may offer unique answers for the future of humanity.
Keywords
Arabian Peninsula; Oman; Yemen; Indian Ocean; Modern South Arabian Languages (MSAL); Kumzari; Gulf Arabic; Fishing communities; Marine terminology; Oral literature; Linguistic and cultural data; Regional historyDOI
10.11647/OBP.0409ISBN
9781805113331, 9781805113317, 9781805113324, 9781805113331Publisher
Open Book PublishersPublisher website
https://www.openbookpublishers.com/Publication date and place
Cambridge, 2025Imprint
Open Book PublishersSeries
Semitic Languages and Cultures, 32Classification
Arabic
Sociolinguistics
Historical and comparative linguistics
Social and cultural history