

Why the world feels like a shipwreck
Sep 24, 2025
Join Matthew Lazen-Rider, an Ideas producer exploring shipwreck stories, along with literature scholar Stephen Mentz and comparative literature professor Paul Fleming. They unravel the captivating history of shipwreck tales, from ancient epics to contemporary narratives, revealing their deep cultural resonance. Ethnomusicologist Heather Sparling shares insights on disaster songs that help communities mourn and memorialize maritime losses. Together, they discuss the ship as a metaphor for political strife and the fragile nature of existence in our tumultuous times.
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Shipwrecks As Timeless Human Drama
- Shipwreck stories have captivated humans from Homer to modern films as a central storytelling trope.
- They dramatize moments when skillful humans meet forces beyond control and face vulnerability.
Ocean Swimming Inspires Scholarship
- Stephen Mentz describes daily swims in Long Island Sound to connect physically with the ocean.
- He uses that embodied experience to inform his work on shipwreck narratives and the blue humanities.
Ship As State Metaphor
- Shipwrecks often stand for political or social failure, with the ship representing the state.
- The moment of wreck shows institutions failing to protect people or steer society.