Note: The American book cover pictured here irks me a bit since both female main characters are described as having dark hair.

Core Text:

Itaranta, Emmi. Memory of Water. Harper Voyager, 2014.

Summary:

In Emmi Itaranta’s futuristic dystopian world, global warming has significantly melted the polar ice caps, drastically changing the Earth’s geography. Large coastal cities were drowned when the rising oceans vastly altered shorelines. Salt water has intruded into freshwater resources thus drinking water is scarce and the most coveted commodity.

Seventeen-year-old Noria Kaito lives with her parents in a small village on the outskirts of the city Xinjing within the Scandinavian Union, now occupied by the power state of New Qian. Noria is training to become a tea master like her father, a profession which is controversial and challenging for a female to earn. When Noria’s mother moves to the city to take a position at the University of Xinjing, her father completes her tea master instruction which includes finally revealing to her a hidden natural freshwater spring in the fells just near their home which they must protect. Shortly after her tea master graduation ceremony, Noria’s father becomes ill, leaving her to tend to their home, the tea house, and the secret spring all on her own.

Noria’s life-long best friend, Sanja, is her only trusted companion. Together they navigate the wartime oppression as they line up at a single pump with fellow villagers to fill jugs with their weekly water allowance. They get pleas to spare a cup of water from scared mothers holding their sick babies while waiting in line to receive medical care from the severely understaffed and ill-equipped hospital.

As an escape from the horrors of everyday life, Noria and Sanja frequent the plastic grave on the outskirts of their village to hunt for unlikely treasures from the past-world era. Sanja is a tech wiz and spends her time in her workshop immersed in restoring the items that the pair recover. After finding buried hidden discs at the secret spring and a busted player in the plastic grave which Sanja repairs, the two learn that the recordings contain documentation of an unfinished expedition to the Lost Lands which leads them to plot their own journey in hopes of completing the mission that the team of scientific researchers could not.

Emmi Itaranta tells Memory of Water at an unhurried and cool pace like the gradual trickle of water through earth and rock. Yet there is something ethereal and enchanting about her prose that keeps the reader engaged in this deep story and the characters whose secrets shape their purpose and path as intricately as water carves stone.

Teaching Resources:

Atwood, Margaret. “Time Capsule Found on the Dead Planet.” The Guardian, 25 September 2009. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/sep/26/margaret-atwood-mini-science-fiction

In this short text, Margaret Atwood conveys a somber mythical tale illuminating the ages of Humankind. Humanity has risen and fallen and what is left of our great civilization is the writing on a brass cylinder. Atwood invokes the personal and emotional by transfixing the perspective of the reader to that of an outsider, presumably the one finding this profound remnant of history during an archaeological quest. This mirror-like effect parallels the situation in Memory of Water, of Noria and Sanja discovering remnants from the past-world era and trying to piece together their meaning and significance from history. The theme of tracing origins in both works highlights present action and future imaginaries in addressing climate change.

Dawson, Ashley. “Cape Town’s water has a new apartheid” The Washington Post, 10 July 2018. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/theworldpost/wp/2018/07/10/cape-town/

This poignant article describes the water crisis in Cape Town, South Africa during late 2017 into early 2018 that was successfully staved off, at least for the time being. Although water was guaranteed as a human right in South Africa’s new constitution, access to water is unequal. Municipalities have yet to provide sufficient infrastructure to many low-income areas where residents must trek a long distance to wait in line at scare communal taps and lug their water home while wealthy neighborhoods consume water freely and in excess. Memory of Water is an allegory of this real-life circumstance that will become more urgent as impacts from climate change are experienced. The novel highlights the social injustice associated with water scarcity experienced by the disadvantaged village residents on the outskirts of the large city and well as the government’s role in affording access to a basic necessity.  

Nixon, Rob. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Harvard, 2013.

Nixon’s innovative concept of “slow violence” focuses on the gradual and often out of sight violence on vulnerable communities wrought by climate change. Precarious ecosystems and poor, disempowered populations suffer the brunt of the climate crisis which they had little influence on causing. In Memory of Water the village where Noria lives is kept isolated and uninformed as to the larger happenings in the world but the ever-looming military presence restricts what they are allowed to do and where they are permitted to go. Not having access to plentiful water supplies or adequate health care causes much suffering in the village and some residents even resort to filling up jugs of water from a contaminated stream near the plastic grave just to have enough to drink or bathe with.

Discussion Questions:

  1. Margaret Atwood alludes to what has transpired in the history of Humankind in “Time Capsule Found on the Dead Planet” similar to how Emmi Itaranta largely infers the events of the past-world era in Memory of Water. Noria and Sanja find bits and pieces of history that they must make sense from to gain knowledge of the past, present, and future. Interestingly, they also make a game out of creating and hiding time capsules of their own containing random personal objects and inscribing them with date indicating when they may be opened again. What are the effects of this practice of encapsulating history on those that create these memorials of the past and on those that discover them? Why is this such a powerful tool in telling stories and what does this say about human nature and our relationship to time and space?
  2. Though Noria and Sanja are best friends, their backgrounds are very different. Noria’s father is a respected tea master, her mother is college professor, and they live in a nice and spacious and home at the edge of the village that has been in their family for generations. Sanja’s family life and living conditions, on the other hand, are described as much less affluent. How do the socio-economic disparities between the friends come into play throughout the novel? In what ways are they treated differently by the other characters in the story especially the military enforcement? How do their backgrounds affect the decisions each of them make and ultimately their fate?
  3. Noria is more privileged than most in her village largely because she has access to the hidden natural freshwater spring that her father and past ancestors have been protecting. She must still make her presence a few times a week at the communal pump and try not to appear as though she has bathed so frequently in order to keep her secret. But when the situation in her village gradually worsens she decides that she will help others in need and as a result she marked as a water criminal with a painted blue circle on her door and is imprisoned in her own home to await her final judgement. Why did the military look the other way when Noria’s father was alive though they had suspicions that the Kaito’s had been harboring a secret water source? How does sharing her water with others in her community threaten the authority of the military and jeopardize their attrition warfare strategies?

1 thought on “

  1. Maeve Higgins

    Fascinating – great review and this book is on my list now. I know you’re a big reader so I take this rec seriously! Very interesting you linked to that WaPo piece about Cape Town too, that close call certainly was a wake up call for me when it happened, perhaps because it was covered widely in the media.

    I’m keen to read this too because of the young female protagonist who it sounds like has become a water protector, often right now in the Global South it is up to girls and women to find and haul water for their families. And the plastic grave – chilling! But I guess, where do I think plastic ends up, since it doesn’t just vanish!

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