Sirenomelia: Nature Always Prevails

Humans have a long-standing desire to conquer—this includes lands, oceans, and even people. But what would a world look like with the absence of humans? Emilija Škarnulytė’s short film Sirenomelia attempts to answer this question, as it portrays a mermaid swimming through an abandoned arctic submarine base in silence, with no human interaction. In Sirenomelia, Škarnulytė uses the haunting image of the mermaid gliding through an abandoned submarine base to deafening silence to suggest that while human presence is fleeting, nature endures. By staging this encounter in a space once designed for human dominance, the film underscores the futility of humanity’s attempts to conquer the ocean and reminds us that the environment will ultimately prevail.

Mermaid wearing scuba mask in Sirenomelia, Emilija Škarnulytė

The film blurs the boundary between human and natural worlds, questioning where one ends and the other begins. The presence of the mermaid complicates this relationship—her hybrid form could indicate that she could lean either human or fish (nature). Interestingly, the mermaid sports a scuba mask (Škarnulytė 4:13), which would mean she could potentially lean more “human.” However, her unnatural abilities—swimming through water for long periods of time and her fish-like tail— would separate her from the humans we know of today. So, her appearance and capabilities raise the question: are humans a part of nature or are they separate from it? Perhaps Škarnulytė suggests that attempting to separate ourselves from nature is artificial and unstable, just like the creations we brought to this world, which are now left behind in a world devoid of humans. The hybridity of the mermaid seems to represent that humans have a place within nature; however, in the grand scheme of things, they will eventually die out and leave behind a world tainted by their presence.

Humans have always tried to conquer, but in Škarnulytė’s film, it seems that they have failed to do so. Thus, the abandoned submarine base represents humanity’s failed attempt to dominate the oceans. Humans have been trying for generations to conquer lands and draw borders, even in the water. Not only does the base represent their failed attempt at conquering the oceans, but it also represents failed ambitions and the humiliation that came with their failure. The film has multiple shots of empty corridors filled only with water, with no sign of human life. What once was likely a bustling and deadly submarine base catering to the human desire to conquer is now the playground for a mermaid who might not have ever interacted with a human. In essence, the base becomes a relic of human ambition, which is now reclaimed by nature. With no humans to operate it, her world lacks conflict and danger. The absence of humans highlights the temporality of human structures compared to the endurance of the environment.

Mermaid swimming to sonor sounds, Sirenomelia, Emilija Škarnulytė

Of course, the absence of human life has a significant impact on the messaging within the film, but the soundscape also reinforces the counteracting balance between humans and nature. The closing scene shows the mermaid swimming from a birds-eye point of view, looking down on her in the vast expanse of the ocean (Škarnulytė 5:15). In the background is the unsettling sound of what might be a sonar system. As the mermaid swims past, she leaves behind a trail of “waves,” in both the literal sense and a symbolic sense. As her tail flaps against the water, it creates waves both physically through the water and sonically through the soundwaves, almost like she is sending a message. She is the siren alerting humans of her presence, if there are any remaining. This strange and interesting combination of human devoidness but also human influence hints that even if this post-human landscape sees no humans, it still has that touch of human influence.

Although humans may strive to conquer nature by any means possible, whether that means policing borders or drawing lines non the oceans, nature will ultimately prevail. Humans are at an interesting cross-section between nature and something separate from nature. Though they have a place within nature, their ambition will ultimately be their demise. They will one day cease to exist, and all that will remain are the oceans and the lands surrounding them, and perhaps a post-human mermaid wearing a scuba mask. By showing us nature’s quiet endurance, Škarnulytė invites us to reconsider our place within—not above—the natural world.

Works Cited

Škarnulytė, Emilija. Sirenomelia. Nowness Video Art Visions, 2017. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foH0QGuC3kY

Week 13: African Mermaids and Other Water Spirits

I find it interesting how even throughout the transatlantic slave trade, water deities such as Yemoja/Yemaja were still worshiped throughout rough historical times for Yourban people. It would make sense how throughout slavery like this that occurred throughout different coasts that a figure closer to the water would seem fitting to pray and worship to during a time like this. But not only that, the trade and spread of this water diety was shared with other places like, “[…] Brazil, Uruguay, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, and the United States” (Pg. 166), which I could only assume is how other forms of Yemoja developed association with similar beings like Mami Wata.

Reason being why this stood out was considering how consistently throughout history there are different takes on sub-human creatures, Mermaids, or water dieties based on the social and religious need of society during that time. For example, the Christianity’s need to portray mermaids in a hyper sexual way to warn off men from giving into lust and desire, or in this case, slaves search for a sense of comfort from Yemoja during there transatlantic moves.

Essay 2

Emilija Škarnulytė’s short film Sirenomelia, captures a mermaid in an area that was once a NATO base. The film captures different angles of not only the area but also of the water, satellite and the mermaid herself. The audio is listed as “white noise”, that’s it. No additives. Just white noise. Implying that that is the sound for the whole film. Interestingly enough there is a moment in which the mermaid is in frame that the audio sounds like sirens— just like a siren/mermaid sound would sound like. The inclusion of the siren sound into the natural noises that make up white noise is an example of the inclusion for non-human beings, thus resembling the disruption of non-human beings into the world of humans and vice versa. 

For definition, white noise is defined as audible frequencies played at equal intensity and is made up of natural sounds. Sounds are often used as a form of communication, words from a human voice and non verbal sounds like that of a different being communicating to other beings of the same kind. In Sirenomelia, there is a change in audio as soon as the camera is underwater  (TIME 3:10), there is an audible siren coming from underwater coming from a different being, a non human. This moment is the introduction to what viewers later realize in a mermaid or siren. 

Once the mermaid is present (TIME 3:54), the siren sound is more audible. From the moments of sounds from the air, the emptiness is audible, up until the camera is underwater and the mermaid comes into camera. The audio does not change to just sounds of water but it allows the audio of the mermaid to go through. It is an inclusive moment that does not conceal the unknown from life in water. It invites questions and interest beyond what humans know already about the water. Had it been covered up by just the noise of water, it would lack authenticity. The natural world is authentic and when it is unaltered by humans, there comes sounds and creation beyond humans knowledge and understanding. 

Moving onto another disruption in audio (TIME 4:10), there is a sound of static and radio—quite out of the normality that would be classified as “natural sounds.” At this moment the mermaid has her head above water and is directly at the camera. This moment is symbolic as a mesh between two distinct lives on the same land. Humans and non human beings are in the moment looking right at each other, the mermaid is looking right at the viewer. Almost haunting when the unimaginable is right in front of view, just as mermaids are beings that humans don’t understand and know much about. Humans are the strange beings in the mind of a mermaid, humans are the beings that are out of the ordinary, which is amplified through the static. 

Even though this world is a shared space with human beings and the non-human beings, Sirenomelia shows the reality where both species mesh together and what it would sound like through the frequency of white noise. 

Look Past The Land and To The Sea (Discovery #2)

Derek Walcott’s “The Sea Is History” is a beautiful piece of work with an urgent lesson that the sea is not background scenery; it is an archive that holds and speaks history. Walcott teaches this by shifting among voices and by turning physical seascape details into evidence. Listening to the ocean, and to the people who know it, becomes a method for doing history, which is exactly the work environmental humanities asks us to do.

The first voice in the poem sounds like an official examiner: “Where are your monuments, your battles, martyrs?” The question treats history as something that can be pointed to in stone or on paper. Walcott then flips the power dynamic with a second voice, a local answer that is calm and exact: “Sirs, in that grey vault. The sea. The sea / has locked them up. The sea is History.” Notice the steps in that reply. “Sirs” politely resists the authority of the examiner. “Grey vault” renames the ocean as a protected archive, not a blank horizon. The short, repeated sentences, “The sea. The sea.”—slow the rhythm and force the reader to look. Finally, “has locked them up” suggests both safekeeping and imprisonment, raising a hard truth: the ocean preserves the past, but it also keeps it out of easy reach. This exchange shows how multiple voices matter. The examiner’s narrow demand produces a local correction, and the lesson becomes clear: if you only look for statues, you will miss the records written in water, salt, and tide.

Walcott then backs the claim with material evidence. The poem does not just say the sea remembers; it shows how it remembers: “Bone soldered by coral to bone.” The verb “soldered” is precise and unsettling. It is a workshop word, a human technique for fusing metal, now applied to bodies under pressure and time. Coral, usually a sign of life, acts here as the binding agent. In one short line, Walcott compresses human remains, marine growth, and craft vocabulary. The image does three things at once: it proves that the environment is a physical ledger; it rejects clean, heroic versions of the past; and it makes the reader feel the cost in the very texture of the reef. A close reading of this line is enough to see the poem’s lesson: the ocean carries the archive in its own living matter.

Finally, the poem turns from claim to practice through a guiding voice: “strop on these goggles, I’ll guide you there myself.” The imperative “strop” (to sharpen) does double duty. It literally prepares a tool and metaphorically sharpens perception. “Goggles” make the method explicit: if the records are underwater, then research requires gear, time, and humility. The promise “I’ll guide you” also matters. It centers local knowledge and embodied learning over distant judgment. Rather than staying with the examiner’s demands, the poem puts the reader in the water, where careful looking replaces abstract debate. In other words, Walcott doesn’t just argue that the sea is an archive. He hands us a method for reading it.

Across these moments, one message threads the poem: history is co-authored by environment and people, and we can hear it only by honoring more than one voice. The examiner teaches us what a narrow standard looks like. The local reply teaches us where to look instead. The imperative to “strop on these goggles” teaches us how to look closely, physically, with guidance. This is not just a poem about the ocean. It is a set of instructions hiding in plain sight. If we follow them, reefs become records, shorelines become shelves, and currents become witnesses. That is the poem’s lesson and its challenge: to practice a history that listens to the sea that has been keeping the files all along.

Capitalizing the Ocean: Power of the Language

In The Ocean Reader: Theory, Culture, Politics, Eric Paul Roorda presents the ocean not as something that can be limited or fully understood by human sight, but as an independent and living entity. He criticizes how humans have always viewed the ocean through a human-centered and land-centered perspective, treating it only as a background for human life. Roorda points out that this bias comes from the fact that humans see themselves as the center of existence. By calling humanity a “terrestrial species,” he challenges that view and repositions both human beings and the ocean. As he writes, “This book aims to avoid that natural bias predominating among our terrestrial species and replace it with a steady focus on the Ocean and on events that take place offshore” (Roorda, p.1). Through this statement, he reminds readers that humans are not the entirety of the Earth but creatures who depend on a limited space called land.

This change in perspective also appears in Roorda’s language. He explains, “To capitalize Ocean is to challenge the conventional wisdom that the seas can be taken for granted” (Roorda, pp.3–4). The act of capitalizing the letter “O” becomes a symbolic gesture of resistance. The word “challenge” shows that this is not a simple stylistic choice but a conscious effort to question and overturn traditional thinking. By writing “Ocean” instead of “ocean,” Roorda transforms the sea from a natural object into a proper noun, a subject with its own identity and agency. The ocean, in his view, is not a romantic or divine figure but a historical and ecological force that shapes life on Earth. As he writes, it “has a history” (Roorda, p.1) and possesses its own ecosystem that moves and changes beyond human control.

Roorda also draws attention to how human language has limited the ocean’s meaning. He observes, “It has always been difficult for humans to think of the Ocean as a place” (Roorda, p.1). Here, the phrase “think of” reveals the human tendency to define the ocean only as an idea or a location within human knowledge. Humans have tried to map it, name it, and divide it into “the Seven Seas” (Roorda, p.1), reducing a vast and dynamic being into measurable space. Roorda sees this as a kind of linguistic violence. By confining the ocean to human concepts, people forget that it moves, circulates, and exists beyond human understanding. Therefore, capitalizing the word “Ocean” is not only a visual change but also an attempt to transform human perception. It is a linguistic strategy that aims to rebuild the relationship between humans and the natural world.

Through this shift, Roorda encourages readers to see the ocean not as a tool for human industry or tourism but as an independent being that creates its own history. He shows that the history of the Ocean and the history of humanity are deeply connected and interdependent. The Ocean has influenced migration, climate, and trade long before humans began to write their own history. Thus, the Ocean and humanity exist as equals, not as master and servant. The capitalized “Ocean” reminds us that the sea is not owned or defined by humans but coexists with them.

In this sense, Roorda’s decision to call humans a “terrestrial species” becomes even more meaningful. The phrase exposes the limited position of humankind. It suggests that humans are not the rulers of nature but one of many beings sharing this planet. Recognizing ourselves as terrestrial species forces us to step away from the illusion of superiority and toward a relationship based on coexistence. Humans must see themselves as part of nature, not above it.

In the end, Roorda’s “Ocean” becomes a symbol of linguistic and intellectual transformation. By changing one letter, he invites readers to rethink the way language shapes our view of the world. The capitalized Ocean is more than a geographic concept; it is an act of reimagining. It reminds us that naming is a form of power and that words can either limit or liberate how we understand the world around us. Roorda’s essay is not simply about the sea. It is about how humans can learn to see nature as an equal companion rather than a background or a resource. His “Ocean” is not only a body of water but a doorway to a new way of seeing, one that allows us to recognize the world as alive, interconnected, and beyond human control.

Discovery 2: Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX

A topic we’ve talked about in class was how humans viewed themselves separate from nature. However, despite all of humanity’s advancements providing convenience and comfort, there is still a desire to return to nature’s authenticity. In the show Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX, protagonist Amate Yuzuriha expresses these views within the first few minutes of episode one. Reminding its watchers why mankind cannot truly separate themselves from nature.

In the show’s setting Amate was born in a world where humanity has advanced far enough to no longer ‘shackle’ themselves to the Earth. Over half of the population in this speculative world lives amongst the stars within self-sustaining colonies. In a similar vein to people, like myself, born within the last two decades, Amate from birth was surrounded by technology. People born and growing up within the last two decades had access to devices prior generations didn’t. We can chat with others across the globe, see sights without needing to go to them in person, etc. All of which can be done on the amazing portable screens in our pockets we bring everywhere daily. However, at a certain point—we realize its not real. At the very least it feels suffocating.

“A space colony 6.4 km in diameter generates 1G of rotational gravity by rotating once every 113.5 seconds. This force that presses us to the ground isn’t real gravity. The heavens aren’t above our heads, but under our feet. Those of us born in the colony don’t know of real gravity or the real sky. Let alone the real sea.” (Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX episode 1: Red Gundam, 03:14 – 03:51)

Amate’s view of the world she lives in reflects a realization that many people living in modern, technology saturated cities eventually come to. That the very conveniences which surround can feel suffocating. Longing for experiences that aren’t medicated by the constructed environments from device screens and modern life. From personal experience I often feel burnt out scrolling through platforms like X (formerly twitter), TikTok, or Instagram. I get tired of having to look my phone’s screen and see things that bother and annoy me. To recover I travel somewhere to get fresh air, the best location I personally could think of was the beach. The air there feels ‘authentic’ than if I were just to exit my house. It may stem from the fact seeing the ocean instills the feeling its real. That this breath of fresh air is not manmade and I get to experience it in real-time myself.

Going off this, closer inspection of Amate’s quote tells of the unique bond between humans and nature. On some instinctive level we just know things within the natural world is just real. Compared to manmade things—like generative A.I content—which people do struggle with telling if it is or not. Especially with generative A.I content, there is discourse over the fact if A.I is even real art. That when an actual human makes it one can feel and see the creativity and life in it. This isn’t a new feeling unique to A.I. Rather, it’s something that’s been there since society modernized. The yearning we have to want to feel, see, and experience something authentic. Why we go back and reconnect with nature despite all modern advancements. Because its natural from the world that birthed us compared to our creations.

Discovery #2

(Škarnulytė Sirenomelia) Frame@4:36

For my discovery I want to highlight the short film Sirenomelia by Emilija Škarnulytė. The post-apocalyptic setting emphasizes how nature, and the mermaid as its symbol, endures beyond human collapse, turning the abandoned man-made facility into proof that humanity is gone but the natural world continues to adapt and survive.

In the short film, the man-made building is a decommissioned NATO submarine base above the Arctic Circle that seems abandoned by humans on land, but underwater there is plenty of marine biology thriving. According to the photo above from the film, the facility proves that it is decaying because the equipment on both decks have some rusting beginning to occur and not to mention there is no upkeep on the cleanliness of their flooring. Notice the lack of human appearance? That’s on purpose to decenter humans and focus on how resilient nature is that it has outlasted them in this post apocalyptic world. Again referring to the film still, the mere-being is swimming along the surface of the water, meaning that they aren’t shy of their appearance and no human can push back against their species.Throughout the film, no humans appear, which we aren’t used to. Have you noticed that even nature documentaries that are supposed to focus on wildlife still have human influence because they manipulate the camera and what they want to show, with an occasional shot of a filmographer trying not to interact with the approaching wildlife to “maintain” authenticity of the animals behavior. Sirenomelia has introduced us to a new perspective of viewing species which is allowing the mere-being to be autonomous about what they want shown and controlling their own narrative. Something that is truly unique and adds to the post apocalyptic sense of the world.

The quiet power being depicted by the mere-being and the shots of aquatic flora sets the tone for how deceiving it can be assuming everything will end once humans die off, but instead they flourish without limitations. Referring to the film still again, while recognizing how evident it is to point out the mere-being in the water swimming. We have to acknowledge the sentiment behind this simple action, it’s their habitat now. Despite it being a decaying submarine base, nature will evolve and will continue to outlive humans, who are insistent on destroying their habitat for personal gain. Adapting is their power of persevering through all the man-made inventions on their land and in their water.

The mere-being is the symbol of nature and how it will always persevere because that’s what they’ve done for millions of years. Their evolution won’t stop and as long as the postapocalyptic world continues to exist, they will too. The mere-being is living proof that outliving humans pushes us off that pedestal thinking the world revolves around us, but rather really focuses on the incredible evolution of nature and how when their world changes so do they. Throughout the film, there is a quietness that can seem eerie to us, humans, but it’s natural for the mere-being and other marine biology living there. It’s an emphasis on how taking humans out the equation can bring calmness and balance to nature. It’s a noisy world when humans are involved and with the proof of this film it shows how great the world will continue to thrive with humans being extinct. 

Sirenomelia has executed the idea of humans being temporary but nature is adaptable. Their lens is a wake up call that humans aren’t at the top of the food chain and a new order has been instilled, which is that nature will always succeed us.  

Works Cited:

Škarnulytė, Emilija. “Sirenomelia.” YouTube, 2 Aug. 2017, youtu.be/foH0QGuC3kY?si=aO7_SCVfklfcKI1c. Accessed 16 Nov. 2025. 

Week 13: Maman Dlo’s Gift

This story felt so much like an alternative version of Adam and Eve, where Eve chooses of her own volition to leave the garden, or forest, to join man. Wherein Eve in her story is secondary to Adam, here he is almost absent, and is an intruder upon her home, her forest, and is a spark of her curiosity.

As a response to her worship, Maman Dlo offers her a gift, a comb for her hair “made of shell and silver(p.279).” Maman Dlo’s gift is like a telephone, which opens communication between the young women and the Oriye. Her comb reminded me of Gabrielle Tesfaye’s seashell headphones that she plugged into the sand, in “The Water Will Carry Us Home.” This gift, the ability to listen and understand, is not one given lightly; her follower, the young woman who receives the gift, shows a deep appreciation for the forest and the spirits of the water.

Through the song of the comb, she learns Maman Dlo’s name, her sister’s name, and they share with her “the sirens’ song of the sailors who had dashed to death upon the rocks at Saut d’Eau, and learned not to dread the deafening silence of the forest.” This connection teaches her about the history of the water and builds upon her respect for it.

Maman Dlo’s treatment of her young follower is like that of a mother, not just because she is a female spirit/deity, but because she communicates with her followers directly and, in a sense, does not abandon them. Although she can no longer hear Maman Dlo, Maman Dlo can hear her prayers through the comb and answers them

Maman Dlo offers women a view of religion and nature that speaks to them, about love, connection to nature, and separation from the rules and laws of men. Maman Dlo offered her follower the greatest gift of all, a history and a community among women. Her fall from grace with Maman Dlo comes from her defiance, and her punishment, by rejoining the world of men, is no longer being connected with the siren song. However, what was beautiful about this story is that despite having been separated from the siren song, Maman Dlo still came to her aid. This story’s focus on water as a form of connection is important because it offers a feminine perspective of bodies of water and humans being connected for the better, when humans endeavor to treat it with respect

Sacred Texts, Silenced Histories in “The Sea is History”

Derek Walcott’s “The Sea is History” uses biblical structure not simply as a stylistic choice but as a critical framework for analyzing how Western powers recorded, interpreted, and ultimately controlled history in the Caribbean. Walcott’s references to Genesis, Exodus, the Ark of the Covenant, and Lamentations reconstruct a familiar Christian chronology. However, he fills each biblical moment with the events of colonialism, slavery, and cultural destruction. By structuring the poem as a distorted biblical timeline–moving from Genesis and Lamentations–Walcott critiques how colonial and Christian narratives have overwritten indigenous and African histories. Walcott’s poem, therefore, functions as an intervention by exposing how written, Christian-based historical frameworks directly displace Indigenous and African histories, and it offers a counter-history rooted in the physical realities of the Middle Passage and its aftermath. 

Walcott begins with a direct challenge to Western conceptions of historical legitimacy. The opening question–“Where are your monuments, your battles, martyrs? / Where is your tribal memory?” (lines 1-2)–is phrased like an interrogation from a European authority. It represents the Western assumption that history must be preserved through monuments, documentation, and written evidence. This logic mirrors the structure of the Bible, which Western culture often treats as the ultimate historical archive because of it being a chronologically ordered, text-bound account that certifies a people’s origins. This implied standard resembles the injunction in Deuteronomy to “remember the days of old; consider the generations long past. Ask your father and he will tell you, your elders, and they will explain to you” (32:7), a command tied to written and genealogical record-keeping. The speaker’s answer, “The sea. The sea has locked them up. The sea is History” (lines 3-4), directly opposes this definition. Walcott establishes that the history of the Caribbean cannot be found in the forms that Western historians value. It exists in a different medium that isn’t writing, but the ocean, which holds the remains and experiences of enslaved Africans. This distinction sets up the poem’s argument. Walcott is not simply describing memory; he is identifying the limits of Western archival practices and showing that those limits contribute to the erasure of Caribbean history. 

The poem’s movement into “Genesis” (line 9) marks the first of Walcott’s revisions of biblical narrative. Instead of the creation of the world, “Genesis” becomes “the lantern of a caravel” (line 8), referring to the arrival of European ships. By replacing the biblical origin story with the beginning of colonial intrusion, Walcott critiques how the West positions itself as the starting point of civilization. His revision exposes that what the Bible names as the beginning of life, Caribbean history names as the beginning of violence. This substitution is analytical, not metaphorical…Walcott demonstrates that colonial and Christian frameworks do not describe Caribbean reality accurately. Instead, they replace local histories with European interpretations of beginnings, origins, and meaning.

Walcott’s next biblical reference, “Exodus” (line 12), continues this critique. In the Bible, Exodus recounts the liberation of the Israelites from slavery. Walcott’s version is the opposite. He describes “the packed cries, / the shit, the moaning” (lines 10-11) in the holds of slave ships. Rather than liberation, this “Exodus” represents enslavement and forced displacement. This reversal directly critiques how Christian narratives were used historically to justify colonial domination. The enslaved were taught a biblical story about freedom while experiencing the complete denial of freedom. 

The reference to “the Ark of the Covenant” (line 16) continues this rewriting. Traditionally, the Ark symbolizes divine authority and continuity. Walcott’s description–“Bone soldered by coral to bone” (line 13)–places the Ark underwater, made of the bodies of the enslaved. This is not a poetic flourish; it is a direct critique of how Christian symbols gained authority in the Caribbean at the expense of African and Indigenous cultural memory. The new “Ark” is not divine but historical because it records the violence that Christian frameworks either ignored or sanitized. Walcott uses the Christian symbol to show how Christian narratives displaced the cultural and spiritual structures of the enslaved. The biblical reference allows him to highlight a specific historical process: the substitution of African cosmologies with the Christian doctrine. 

When the poem reaches “Lamentations” (line 49), Walcott emphasizes destruction and mourning. The biblical Book of Lamentations recounts the fall of Jerusalem, but Walcott’s version refers to the repeated devastation of Caribbean landscapes through both natural disaster and colonial exploitation. The line “that as just Lamentations, / it was not History” (lines 50-51) is so important. Walcott critiques the way Western narratives treat colonial suffering as incidental, marginal, or irrelveant ot “official” or “real” history. Lamentation, in his framing, is not part of recognized history because it does not appear in Western archives. The poem, therefore, distinguishes between written history, which reflects the perspective of colonizers. And lived history, which reflects the experiences of the colonized.

One of the poem’s clearest critiques of Western archival practices appears in the lines, “but the ocean kept turning blank pages / looking for History” (lines 24-25). The “blank pages” indicate the absence of written documentation of the experiences Walcott is recounting. The Atlantic slave trade produced no journals written by the enslaved, no monuments created by them, and no records preserved in their voices. Walcott uses the image of a blank page to explain how Western standards of documentation create historical gaps. If writing defines what counts as history, then the lives of those denied literacy, citizenship, or authorship become invisible. The poem argues that Western historical frameworks erase history not because the events did not happen, but because they were not recorded in the medium that the West values. The poem ends by asserting that history “really” begins not in Western writing, but in the ongoing struggle to recover suppressed voices. This is Walcott’s final critique…the biblical timeline he has revised shows that Western frameworks dictate beginnings, endings, and meaning in ways that erase non-Western histories. By rewriting scripture, he exposes this erasure and replaces it with a historically grounded alternative. 

middle earth

As I read Aganju and Yemaja we are told that the children were named those names for the reason that they were “union of heaven and earth” and their best describe the narrator as a union in which they represent the balance that both heaven and earth scale on.while Yemaja the childrens serves as a warning to the reader to not embrace feminity or masculinty for they could suffer consqueneces such as Yemaja in which her own son Orugan embraced traditional masculinity and ravaged his own mother and in the reverse Yemaja in which she was to intimate with her feminity and felt that her unloyalty would cause friction within her relationship.The story layers the meaning behind their names as different planes and tries to keep each of their domains seperate but seem to intrude into one another.The author seemed to layer the story such as their names by describing each of their origins and then interminglining their stories such as Aganju having to be helped by his father as well as Yemaja being unwilling raped by his own son. This is further developed by the narration in which they explain that Yemaja split herself into two and bore the creation of many other minor gods,but leaves the reader to believe that they are own seperate entities.That is not the case though and in reality the reasoning the narrator wants us to come up with is that Yemaja was in reality was a combination of all these minor gods and felt that by dividing herself up it would divide her feminity and masculinity.