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The blue humanities explore our relationship with water through the humanities. (Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock)

The blue humanities explore our relationship with water through the humanities. (Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock) 

USF Blue Humanities program sets sail with spring symposium

By Kellie Britch, College of Arts and Sciences

惚釦幛s program will launch its spring 2026 online symposium, , with an in-person event, on Feb. 12, at USF St. Petersburgs Nelson Poynter Memorial Library. The program will continue to host a , which will start the next day and run through May, featuring scholars and creatives from around the world who will speak about the rich exchange between art, humanities and water. 
 
Blue Humanities, a term coined by the symposiums keynote speaker, Steve Mentz, is a broad, interdisciplinary field that uses the humanities to explore our relationship with the marine world, said Thomas Hallock, a professor in the Department of English, the Florida Studies program and the Blue Humanities program on the USF St. Petersburg campus. 
 
For Hallock, this work is not only important, its personal. In 2024, Helene made landfall in Florida as a category 4 hurricane, and Hallock and his spouse, Julie Armstrong, watched as the storm surge reached within a block of their St. Petersburg home. 
 
At that moment, climate change no longer became an abstraction, Hallock said. Blue humanities matters because, while oceans have not held the center of attention in the humanities for some time, our seas are making it quite clear that they have not forgotten about us. 
 
Steve Mentz, a professor and chair in the Department of English at St. Johns University and author of the first textbook on the blue humanities, will be on campus for the official launch of the program, which unites the work of existing at USF, including the Gulf Scholars program and the CRESCENDO project.  
 
The blue humanities asks each of us to reimagine our relationships with that most intimate of the elements, water, Mentz said. In this age of sea level rise and tropical storms, not to mention drought in California and flooding in Germany, human interactions with water are taking on new urgency. We hope this symposium and lecture series will introduce students and the community to new ideas and methods of thinking and acting with the water that flows through our communities, our bodies and our ecosystems." 
 
Learn more about the at USF.

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