1197814
research-article2023
CGJ0010.1177/14744740231197814cultural geographiesBremner et al.
Article
cultural geographies
Monsoon as method
1–21
© The Author(s) 2023
Article reuse guidelines:
sagepub.com/journals-permissions
DOI: 10.1177/14744740231197814
https://doi.org/10.1177/14744740231197814
Lindsay Bremner journals.sagepub.com/home/cgj
Beth Cullen
University of Westminster, UK
Jonathan Cane
University of York, UK
University of Pretoria, South Africa
Christina Geros
Royal College of Art, UK
Abstract
This paper is a reflective discussion of the research method developed by a small research team
over a 5-year period as it intra-acted with the south Asian monsoon in three south/southeast Asian
cities. It reflects on how the team’s practice was transformed from being research on or about the
monsoon as a discrete unit of analysis, to research in the monsoon and with its agential materiality.
The paper first outlines the theoretical resources from cultural geography, anthropology, feminist
theory, posthuman theory, and science and technology studies that the project drew from. After this
theoretical section, the paper then discusses the practical implications of the method and the two
emergent strands of research (‘weather matters’ and ‘construction matters’) that were followed in
Chennai, Dhaka, and Yangon. The final section of the paper reflects on the extension of the method
into the formatting of a book and an online exhibition. The paper concludes by arguing that what
the method offers to cultural, weather-based research in monsoonal and other climes, is a situated,
non-formulaic method that recognizes the affordances of the Earth’s agency, of matter and of other-
than-human lives for generating knowledge of and ways of being in changing weather-worlds.
Keywords
assemblage, intra-locution, monsoon, situated knowledge, weather, weathering, weather-world
Introduction
What are we talking about when we talk about the weather? We are talking about the rain, the clouds, the
air, the breath, the fog, the gas, the dust, the soil, the carbon, the climate, the bomb, the border, the math,
the sensor, the sensorium, the satellite, the snow, the ice, the exorcist, the shaman, the gods, the future, the
good fortune, the bad luck, and the better times ahead.1
Corresponding author:
Lindsay Bremner, School of Architecture and Cities, University of Westminster, 35 Marylebone Road, London NW1 5LS, UK.
Email:
[email protected]
2 cultural geographies 00(0)
This paper reflectively examines the processes and outcomes of a research method developed by a
small interdisciplinary research team studying the monsoon in south Asia over a 5-year period. The
team was made up of three architects, an anthropologist, a landscape architect, and a political sci-
entist, and toward the end of the project we were joined by a digital humanities scholar. While none
of us identify as cultural geographers, we have chosen to publish this paper in Cultural Geographies,
because of our interests in how the rhythms, materialities, and spatialities of monsoon weather are
known and embedded in everyday lives, social practices, and urban imaginaries; because of the
critical and interpretative methodology we developed, and because of the methods of observation
and conversation that we used, all of which speak to the themes of the journal. In addition, we
acknowledge our debt to the work of cultural geographers and anthropologists on weather and
place, which is where our work began and makes its primary contribution. Influences include the
seminal works of Tim Ingold on the ‘weather-world’, Mike Hulme on ‘cultures of climate’, and
Phillip Vannini et al., on ‘everyday weather’, as well as scholars who took up Vannini’s call to
understand weather as somatic work, including Jennifer Mason, Marie Vestergaard Madzak, Heid
Jerstad, Eliza de Vet, Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson, and Stine Simonsen Puri.2 We also acknowledge
the influence of Tim Edensor’s idea of vital materialism, Tim Cresswell on the politics of mobility,
and Marijn Nieuwenhuis’s elemental geography, as well as George Marcus’s multi-sited ethnogra-
phy and Eben Kirksey and Stefan Helmreich’s multispecies ethnography, developed intuitively by
our anthropologist into a ‘monsoonal ethnography’.3 All of these scholars influenced and contrib-
uted to shaping the multidisciplinary approach to the study of urban monsoons that we called
‘monsoon as method’.
The paper is a reflection on human relationships with the earth, its hydrosphere, and its atmos-
phere; with weather, with matter, with each other, and with other species. At a time when the domi-
nant image of the monsoon is of disrupted cycles and catastrophic events, the paper is an invitation
to think it differently. It invites readers to think of the monsoon as what Anna Tsing called an
‘open-ended gathering’, an assemblage of human and more-than-human ways of being, knowing,
doing, and intra-acting across difference; a dynamic multiplicity whose story humans are part of,
but by no means author.4 The monsoon is a reminder that the earth ‘is a grand, volatile world of
multiple forces, perhaps worthy of our admiration even if we now construe ourselves as minor
agents in it’, as William Connolly put it.5 The paper hopes to provide a hospitable place for readers
to intra-act with our monsoonal method and to find a position or trace a path for themselves within
its complexity.
The paper is divided into five sections. This introduction familiarizes readers with key features
of the monsoon and sketches out the basic contours of our research methodology. The second sec-
tion (‘assemblages, multiplicities, weathering, and how matter comes to matter’) outlines the
theoretical resources that framed our thinking while developing monsoon as method. It is fol-
lowed by a more empirical section (‘situated practice’) in which we discuss how the method
worked in practice and some of its findings and, in the following section (‘formatting the mon-
soon’), how the method informed the design of a book and an online exhibition. The paper con-
cludes by identifying the two key contributions we think monsoon as method makes to cultural
geographies of weather.
The word monsoon, from mausim in Arabic, meaning season, was originally used by sailors in
the Arabian Sea to refer to the seasonal reversal of prevailing winds occurring at relatively fixed
times each year that made the earliest transoceanic trading systems in the world possible.6 This
occurred, and still does, because the solar energy absorbed by land masses in the northern hemi-
sphere in spring produces temperature differentials between land and sea. Temperature differen-
tials eventually grow large enough to trigger low level southwesterly winds that carry moist air
from the Arabian Sea toward the west coast of India. The winds heat up and rise as they reach the
Bremner et al. 3
coast and, forced upwards by the Western Ghats, the saturated air condenses out as rain. Latent heat
released by the air as it rises pulls in additional moisture, which maintains the rainfall as the mon-
soon progresses across the subcontinent attracted by the summer heat of the Tibetan Plateau. As
winter approaches and the Plateau cools, the winds turn and blow from the northeast toward the
southwest over the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, attracted by their now warmer-than-land
sea temperatures. Over the sea, these cold winds mingle with convective air currents, frequently
producing violent storms and cyclones.7 This giant sea breeze system is relatively stable, but mod-
erated by many factors including the timing and depth of snowfall in the Himalayas, the salinity of
the Indian Ocean, the El Niño Southern Oscillation, the Indian Ocean Dipole, and human activity,
such as the burning of rice stubble in North India at the end of summer.
This brief sketch of the monsoon is drawn from accounts put together by scientists on the basis
of data accumulated from thousands of observation stations on land, in the ocean, and in the
atmosphere, and, more recently, using the mathematical representations of atmosphere-land-ice
systems known as numerical climate models. But the monsoon is more than an annual weather
cycle and abstract scientific data only partially account for it. For more than half the Earth’s
human population and nonhuman populations, the monsoon is a way of being, a matter of birth
and growth, of life and death. It is registered by cultures, lifestyles, politics, and economics that
revolve around its cycles and are disrupted by its ways. It is embodied aesthetic, cultural ritual,
fertile land, reproductive cycle, political clock, and economic indicator. Cities in monsoonal
regions are lively more-than-human political ecologies that are shaped by the monsoon’s uncanny
energies from within. They are seasonal, sometimes wetter, sometimes drier places, overshad-
owed each year by towering rain-bearing cumulonimbus clouds driven by immense winds, inun-
dated by torrential rains that seep, soak, spread, pool, and flow and then evaporate and dry out,
blurring boundaries between ground, water, and air in continuous wet to dry, hot to hotter cycles.
Such cities do not exist in relation to the monsoon, they are configured within it. They cannot be
climate-proofed against it and its vagaries (what an absurd idea!) for they are thrown together
within it in intricate, knotted entanglements.
While, like Sarah Wright and Matalena Tofa, we were mindful of the fact that the monsoon has
its own modes of world making and is entirely indifferent to the questions we might ask of it or
think or feel about it, monsoon as method was a mode of enquiry into ways the monsoon’s liveli-
ness comes about, is lived, loved, feared, and entangled in human and other species’ life worlds.8
It was an approach to learning not only about, but also with the monsoon’s agential materiality – its
cyclical temporality, its wetness and dryness, its saturated air, the heat build-up that precedes the
arrival of the rains, its powerful winds and currents, its downpours and disruptions, its excesses and
scarcities, its refusal to conform to expectations or predictions – and the intra-actions with other
agential materialities, human and otherwise, with which it designs life worlds.
Monsoon as method was a concept and a methodology for troubling both scientific and con-
structivist epistemologies of the monsoon from within. Whilst science offered indispensable
knowledge about the monsoon, it presented such knowledge as empirical facts about an external-
ized nature. Whilst cultural theory enabled critical engagement with the monsoon as material-dis-
cursive practice, it did not allow for the idea of the monsoon as a material agent whose volatile
movements shape human and nonhuman life. Counter to this, monsoon as method recognized the
monsoon as not only an object of study and a material-discursive construct, but also as a subject of
world making, a ‘noteworthy actor’ in the world, not in a positivist, human-centric way, but as an
elusive, vibrant, inhuman other.9 At times nurturing, at times recalcitrant, at times overwhelming,
the monsoon follows logics that have little, if anything to do with what humans make of it, think
of it, or do with it. It is a restless, material multiplicity intra-acting with itself and the human and
nonhuman bodies and practices that respond to and configure it from within in countless divergent
4 cultural geographies 00(0)
ways. Monsoon as method was a way of attempting to think with the monsoon’s agential material-
ity and with its ongoing transformative power as it intra-acted with matter and human and nonhu-
man bodies and practices. It eschewed epistemology and political ecology for ontology, abstraction
for material relations.
An early touchstone for the project was Sarah Whatmore’s ‘Materialist returns: practicing cul-
tural geography in and for a more-than-human world’, which inaugurated an approach to the mon-
soon as a lively, more-than-human agent of social and ecological relations, a ‘modality of
connection between bodies and worlds’.10 At the same time, Tim Ingold’s ‘Earth, sky, wind,
weather’ and ‘Footprints through the weather world: walking, breathing knowing’ introduced us to
the idea of dwelling not on the earth but in the weather.11 The project was further influenced by
Ingold’s argument that things have agency not because humans imbue them with it, but because of
the ‘ways they are caught up in the currents of the lifeworld’.12 Subsequent ideas of ‘weathering’13
or ‘weather ways’,14 as embodied practices, and of weathering as a ‘situated phenomenon embed-
ded in social and political worlds’15 brought our understanding of the monsoon into conversation
with Haraway’s idea that knowledge, like weather, is always situated and material and socially
differentiated.16
Assemblages, multiplicities, weathering, and how matter comes
to matter
Never is a plateau separable from the cows that populate it, which are also the clouds in the sky.17
Monsoon as method was premised on Deleuze and Guattari’s concept of assemblage, a translation
of the French word agencement, which means an arrangement, layout, or fitting together of parts.
Deleuze and Guattari used assemblage to challenge empirical assumptions that reality is made up
of discrete, individuated, measurable entities, and to theorize it as an interminable becoming of
promiscuous, entangled, intra-acting intensities. Assemblages are multiplicities, complex ensem-
bles generated solely out of the forces at work within them with no reference to a transcendent
unity or set of co-ordinates.18
Multiplicity, which replaces the one no less than the multiple, is the true substantive, substance itself. . . .
Even the many is a multiplicity; even the one is a multiplicity. . . . Everywhere the differences between
multiplicities and the differences within multiplicities replace schematic and crude oppositions. . . .
Instead of the enormous opposition between the one and the many, there is only the variety of multiplicity
- in other words, difference.19
Within an assemblage, a haecceity (a term Deleuze and Guattari borrowed from medieval scholas-
tic philosophy, meaning an object with unique, individual properties or an identity) ‘has neither
beginning nor end, origin nor destination; it is always in the middle. It is not made of points, only
of lines’.20 Assemblages and multiplicities, while they might appear to individuate or congeal into
coherence or unity for a time, are always provisional; they are processes of perpetual becoming
brought about the intra-actions between their constituent parts, themselves also multiplicities:
‘there are only multiplicities of multiplicities forming a single assemblage’ extending to the entire
Universe.21 Thinking the monsoon through the notion of assemblage overcame thinking of it as a
discrete unit of meteorological space-time and transformed it into a multiplicity of interpenetrat-
ing, intra-acting ways of being, knowing, and doing, some of which are human, most of which are
in- or nonhuman, some of which are vastly distributed in space and time, others of which are proxi-
mate. While the monsoon might congeal into something recognizable for a time, such as a cloud or
Bremner et al. 5
a downpour or an onset date, the complexity of the intra-actions at play within it ensure that
‘becoming other than itself’ is all that one can be sure about it.22
The concept of assemblage enabled us to distance our work from British historian Rhoads
Murphey’s concept of ‘Monsoon Asia’, which he took from fellow historian C.R. Boxer and used
to define a ‘unit of study’ of Asia.23 Murphey’s Monsoon Asia was a more or less rigid container
defined by geographic boundaries in which rainfall had produced population densities and cultures
with common features. But, going with Deleuze and Guattari, unities are deceptions, designed to
obscure rather than reveal the nature of reality.24 Along with other geographical units such as the
Middle East or Sub-Saharan Africa, Monsoon Asia is a remnant of a European epistemological
spatial imaginary that organizes knowledge of the world in rigid categories as they appear from the
colonial center, reinforcing fantasies of power, dominance, otherness, and peripheralization.25 The
monsoon in our method was not a signifier of otherness, but of a multi-positionality that moved
from outside to inside, pushed the global abstractions of science up against the situated knowledge
of everyday experience and changed the monsoon itself from being an object of study into a force-
ful subject of world making.
Karen Barad’s work was instrumental in further shifting our conceptions of the monsoon from
a thing or metaphor to the material-discursive life world in which our research practice took
shape. She argued that western culture and knowledge practices have been premised since
Democritus on the separation of the ontologically disjointed domains of words with inherent
meanings on one side and things with inherent properties on the other; of humans, and only cer-
tain humans, who do the thinking and the representing, versus everything else.26 Barad rejected
this representationalist metaphysics, replacing it with what she called a ‘performative metaphys-
ics’, in which matter comes to matter through intra-actions between material-discursive compo-
nents (or what she calls the relata) of phenomena.27 ‘Reality is not composed of things-in-themselves’,
she wrote, ‘but of things-in-phenomena’.28
The primary ontological units are not things but phenomena – dynamic topological reconfigurations /
entanglements / relationalities / rearticulations. And the primary semantic units are not words but material-
discursive practices through which boundaries are constructed within phenomena.29
Barad invented the word ‘intra-action’, as opposed to interaction, to capture what takes place in
phenomena.30 Interaction, like hybridity, she argued, assumes that there are separate individual
agencies that precede their interaction. Intra-action on the other hand suggests that the components
of phenomena do not pre-exist their relations, but emerge through intra-actions within phenom-
ena.31 Intra-action, in other words, is the mutual constitution of entangled agencies, or what Barad
referred to as ‘the iterative becoming of spacetimemattering’.32
Within the entangled intra-actions of phenomena, components become differentiated and intel-
ligible to one another through the enactment of what Barad called ‘agential cuts’.33 Agential cuts
are material-discursive practices that emerge through intra-action to determine the boundaries and
properties of components of a phenomena and to make particular embodied concepts meaningful.
Barad made it clear that agential cuts are not imposed from without, they emerge through intra-
action, and they are not only the remit of humans: ‘discursive practices are not placeholders for
human concepts, but are specific material articulations of the world’.34 In fact, human concepts and
practices are not foundational to the nature of phenomena at all. Here we are reminded of Merlin
Sheldrake’s observations of how truffle fungi interpret their environments by sensing the chemical
emissions of the organisms around them and arranging and rearranging their own in response.35 In
this way they negotiate complex interchanges with tree roots, extract nutrients from soils, procre-
ate, hunt, fend off attackers and offer themselves up to be devoured.36 While they might not be
6 cultural geographies 00(0)
conscious or articulate in a human sense, truffles use a chemical vocabulary to give meaning to
their world and to enact iterative changes to ensure their survival. Chemistry is their agential cut.
Vicky Kirby proposed that the earth’s materiality is ‘actively literate, numerate and inventive as
anything we might include within Culture’.37 This claim suggests that the Earth, in its materiality,
thinks, articulates, and self-differentiates. To refer to Sheldrake on fungi again – ‘mycelium is a
living, growing, opportunistic investigation – speculation in bodily form’.38 Matter is alive and
intelligent, not because we humans bestow intelligence on it, but because of the material-discursive
intra-actions through which it engages with its surroundings. Tim Ingold put it like this:
Things are alive and active not because they are possessed of spirit – whether in or of matter – but because
the substances they comprise continue to be swept up in circulations of the surrounding media that
alternately portend their dissolution or . . . ensure their regeneration.39
Matter is not inert substance, but material-discursive intra-action all the way down. ‘The world is
an ongoing open process of mattering, through which mattering itself acquires meaning and form
in the realization of different agential possibilities’.40 In attributing this kind of liveliness to matter
and material intelligence to the world, named things (nouns) become active beings (verbs); matter
matters, hills hill, aerosols aerosol, walls wall, monsoons monsoon, and it is only through hilling
that hills are hills and monsoons are monsoons etc. It also means that there is no such thing as
research, only researching, through material-discursive intra-actions within the reverberating
doings of the world, through which agential cuts emerge to make the world provisionally intelligi-
ble. In other words, epistemology is inseparable from ontology, knowing from being and doing.
Barad reminded us that separations are a consequence of a representationalist metaphysics that
assumes an inherent difference between human and nonhuman, subject and object, mind and body,
matter and discourse.41 She replaced representationalism with onto-epistem-ology – the study of
practices of knowing-in-being as a better way for understanding the world in its emergent becom-
ing. Deleuze and Guattari referred to this as thinking ‘not from the root up, but rather only from
somewhere about the middle’.42
As a practice of knowing-in-being and in keeping with the idea that intra-activity transforms
nouns into verbs, Astrida Neimanis, Rachel Loewen Walker, and Jennifer Mae Hamilton devel-
oped the idea of weathering, as opposed to weather, as a ‘critical response concept and practice for
our time’.43 The concept of weathering drew on an earlier idea of trans-corporeality developed by
Tracy Alaimo to describe relations between bodies and their environments as intra-active material
exchanges.44 Trans-corporeality dissolved the figure ground relation (an image familiar to archi-
tects) between bodies and their environments, proposing that ‘all creatures, as embodied beings,
are intermeshed with the dynamic material world, which crosses through them, transforms them
and is transformed by them’.45 Neimanis, Hamilton, and Walkers’ weathering was a trans-corpo-
real frame to imagine bodies, human and otherwise, as implicated in the weather. Our bodies,
Neimanis and Walker wrote, are ‘weather-bodies . . . thick with climatic interactions . . . makers
of climate time’.46 What they meant by this was that we are the weather and the weather is us.
Climate and weather are not backgrounds to our lives, but time that we make together, just as we
are made by the time makers all around us – the earth’s rocks and soils, decaying buildings, pollut-
ing smoke stacks.47 This proposition counters linear narratives of climate change encapsulated in
graphs and statistics and exposed the futility of the idea that humans can somehow slow it down or
fix it as if we were not fully implicated within it. It engendered possibilities for responsibly imagin-
ing and intervening otherwise in the climatic entanglements of which human bodies are a part.
Given that weathering is neither metaphor nor analogy, but a material-discursive practice, it ena-
bled Neimanis, Hamilton, and Walker to think about the ethics of exposure to weather in relation
Bremner et al. 7
to the political economies of place. For, while all bodies weather, ‘not all bodies weather the same
- weathering is a situated phenomena embedded in social and political worlds’.48 In other words,
weathering, or ‘learning to live with the changing conditions of rainfall, drought, heat, thaw and
storm’ is ‘never separable from the “total climate” of the social, political and cultural existence of
bodies’.49
Having thus elaborated some of the theoretical ideas that emerged from our intra-actions with
the monsoon, the following section discusses, more empirically, how monsoon as method was
developed in practice, in three cities in in south and southeast Asia – Chennai, Dhaka, and Yangon.
Situated practice
Monsoon as method emerged from iterative circulations between our workplace in London and
field sites in south and southeast Asia; between engaging with the monsoon remotely and engaging
with monsoonal phenomena directly through embodied experience, acknowledging Donna
Haraway’s proposition that all knowledge is situated and partial.50 In London we developed a pro-
visional understanding of the monsoon through what Clark and Szerszynski call ‘interdisciplinary
interloping’ – immersing ourselves in scientific literature from fields as diverse as meteorology,
geology, history, politics, and urban studies.51 We visited colonial archives and libraries; we scoped
out cities and field sites; we developed collaborative partnerships in the places we were to visit and
planned field work. We started a reading group to read, talk, and think through the theoretical ques-
tions our work raised. We hosted and contributed to symposia to engage in dialogue with other
scholars from a range of disciplinary backgrounds. We taught an architecture design studio to test
ways that design might be transformed if ideas of monsoonal agency activated design processes.
We developed techniques to translate atmospheric data into maps that visualized monsoonal mat-
tering at a range of scales. Our thinking began to take shape around the key authors, key texts, and
key words discussed in the previous section: assemblage, multiplicity, matter, weathering, weather
worlds, weather ways. We printed these out and pinned them to our office wall as a way of building
a common framework from which we could work both collectively and individually.
After reading Sunil Amrith’s Crossing the Bay of Bengal, the significance of the Bay of Bengal
to the turbulent monsoonal dynamics of the north east, returning monsoon, became clear.52 Instead
of Chennai, Dhaka, and Delhi as field sites as originally proposed, we decided to work in Chennai,
Dhaka, and Yangon, three Bay of Bengal cities, in order to explore the monsoonal intra-relation-
ships, intra-connections, and dis-connections the Bay afforded them (Figure 1). Our field work
took the form of short, multi-sited, iterative engagements at different times of the year (four each
to Chennai and Dhaka and three to Yangon), with a lengthier period of approximately a month in
each city in July/August. In addition, because the monsoonal, human, and non-human geographies
of these cities far exceeded their urban boundaries, we also visited Kanyakumari and Ladakh in
India, Chandpur, Khulna, and Sylhet in Bangaldesh, and Bagan, Mandalay, and Minbu in Myanmar,
significant sites in the monsoon’s regional geography. In Chennai our work was assisted by an
environmental agency, in Dhaka by an architectural education institute and grassroots action
research organization, and in Yangon by an architecture firm. We conducted 37 interviews in
Chennai, 40 in Dhaka, and 26 in Yangon, including with academics, activists, architects, artists,
bloggers, city planners, civil servants, engineers, geologists, hydrologists, jade traders, meteorolo-
gists, photo journalists, ngo staff, and others, and learned from countless informal conversations
with cab drivers, tour guides, and other citizens. We traveled, walked, breathed, observed, listened,
looked, smelled, touched, and ate. We used calendars and maps as participatory research tools. We
undertook ethnographic studies of infrastructure, material substances, and other-than-human crea-
tures. We captured our impressions in field notes, photographs, sound recordings, and videos.
8 cultural geographies 00(0)
Figure 1. Chennai, Dhaka, and Yangon, three Bay of Bengal Cities. Drawing by Christina Geros.
Our guide in each place was to go where the monsoon took us. Although it is frequently stated
that monsoonal rhythms influence the economics, politics, and cultures of south Asia, there is little
research on how this influence materializes in specific urban contexts. In response to this, our start-
ing point was to approach urban life in the cities we studied as monsoonal entanglements being
reworked by urban development processes. When our work began in Chennai in 2016, the city was
still haunted by memories of the floods of a year earlier, which had been brought about by exces-
sive rain over a prolonged period, the political decision to release large volumes of water from one
of the city’s reservoirs, and the encroachment of real estate projects onto wetlands and waterbodies
that had previously held and absorbed monsoonal floodwaters.53 In this context, our attention was
drawn to the Pallikaranai Marsh, a sprawling, though shrinking, wetland in the south of the city,
which had been extensively encroached on by the development of an IT Corridor and its attendant
infrastructure, and where flooding had been particularly severe the year before (Figure 2). We
began by compiling all that we could find about the marsh, the IT Corridor and south Chennai’s
urban hydrology.54 This scoping work and an initial site visit in November 2016 formed the basis
of a research plan that took shape around two parallel but interlinked strands: ‘Weather Matters’
and ‘Construction Matters’. ‘Weather Matters’ investigated how the monsoon-as-weather was
understood, experienced, and acted on by urban residents, how daily life was assembled around
weather, and how weather and lived environments had altered over time. Research was focused on
Perungudi Lake (Figure 3), an urban waterbody connected to the Pallikaranai Marsh, and its sur-
rounding neighborhoods, inhabited by a mix of new migrants and long-term settlers, middle-class,
lower middle-class, and slum communities. A neighborhood association provided a potential first
point of contact and specific research participants were identified based on self-selection and
snowballing. ‘Construction Matters’ focused on understanding how urban development, both his-
toric and current, had disrupted and reconfigured human-monsoonal relations, taking as its starting
Bremner et al. 9
Figure 2. The Pallikaranai Marsh in south Chennai. Photograph by Beth Cullen.
Figure 3. Perungudi Lake in south Chennai. Photograph by Lindsay Bremner.
point the widespread assertion in the media that urban development policies, plans, and practices,
in particular those associated with the IT Corridor, were the ‘architects’ of the 2015 floods. This
research strand was centered on Perumbakkam, a peripheral neigbourhood in the far south of the
city adjoining the southern reaches of the Pallikaranai Marsh that had been rapidly transformed by
the construction of middle class family housing for IT corridor employees (Figure 4). The key
informants for this strand were planners, architects, real estate developers, and residents, identified
through professional contacts and snowballing. Out of these two research strands came a number
of findings about the habits of monsoonal flows, what happens when they are blocked or redirected
(at macro and micro scales), and the contested meanings of urban water and its infrastructure to
different sectors of human society and other species.55
Fieldwork in Chennai also threw up other unanticipated research trajectories, or what Deleuze
and Guattari might call ‘lines of flight’.56 The field spoke back, causing us to modify or change our
research plans. We became aware not only of monsoon water on the ground, but also of the vast-
ness and liveliness of the sky, and of subterranean groundwater (sometimes sweet, sometimes
10 cultural geographies 00(0)
Figure 4. Composite image showing the transformation of Perumbakkam in south Chennai by housing.
Collage by Lindsay Bremner.
brackish, always moving), and that the sky and the underground were animated and connected by
monsoon rains (or lack thereof). The monsoon began to take on aerial and geological agency in
concert with the pluvial agency with which it had initially been associated. We began developing a
technique for photographing sky-earth relationships by turning the pano feature of our phones
through 90° and panning upwards (Figure 5), and groundwater and air became the focus of inves-
tigation for our two PhD research candidates.57 It was in Chennai too that our anthropologist first
noticed the Pantala flavescens (globe skimmer) dragonfly hovering in humid air about a water
tank, and was told by a local resident that its presence often coincides with the arrival of monsoon
rains (Figure 6). The dragonfly appeared again everywhere that we went, giving us glimpses into
its monsoonal life world, and prompting research into the life worlds of other monsoonal creatures
and plants – snakes, hilsa fish, jackfruit, and weeds, both as co-inhabitants of human worlds and
clues to alternative monsoonal life worlds.58 At an entirely different scale, it was during field work
in Chennai, that our landscape architect made the observation that how the monsoon manifested as
experience in the city was informed by far wider meteorological dynamics, leading us to think and
draw the city as part of the monsoon as well as the monsoon as part of the city.
The two initial research strands developed in Chennai were followed through in Dhaka and
Yangon, passing between us and back again, but also, as was the case in Chennai, opening other
research directions. In Dhaka, a trip along Madani Avenue in the east of the city during an early
field trip, revealed an armature of terraformed real estate made by pumping sediment from adjacent
rivers to form terraces for development in otherwise low-lying wetlands (Figure 7). From this ini-
tial observation, we were introduced to the sediment-heavy monsoonal waters that blanket
Bangladesh each year on their journey from the Himalayas to the sea, and to their complex intra-
actions with Dhaka’s garment and real estate industries, materialized not only through dredgers,
Bremner et al. 11
Figure 5. Vertical pan of a monsoon downpour approaching St. Thomas Mount, Chennai. Photograph by
Lindsay Bremner.
Figure 6. A Pantala flavescens dragonfly washed up on Elliots Beach in Chennai. Photograph by Beth Cullen.
12 cultural geographies 00(0)
Figure 7. Sand filled land along Madani Avenue in Dhaka. Photograph by Beth Cullen.
sediment barges, and pumping tubes, but also as contaminated rivers, a depleting aquifer, and the
ubiquitous Bangla brick.59 At this point, following-the-sediment became a research method to trace
this mobile monsoonal material through its entanglements in everyday, material, political, and
socio-economic life, not only in Dhaka, but in all three of the cities we worked in.60 Sediment took
us back to Chennai, drawing our attention to the annual pre-monsoon practices of desilting storm-
water drains and resurfacing roads. It informed our first engagement with Yangon, after finding a
map in the British Library that revealed how the colonial city had been aligned with the porous
sedimentary terraces of the Ayeyarwady River around the base of the laterite crest on which the
Shwedagon Pagoda stands. Subsequent research suggested that socio-political life in Myanmar had
for centuries been co-constitutive with intra-actions between geological and monsoonal dynamics.
Earthquakes and cyclones, droughts and floods had frequently destroyed human lives and left its
settlements in ruins.61 At other times the relationship between geology and the monsoon had mate-
rialized into lucrative extractive economies timed with monsoonal cycles. This insight led to the
jade economy becoming one of our main research strands in Yangon (Figure 8). Thinking with
jade, we were able to establish relations between military companies, Yangon’s luxury real estate
– its shopping malls, hotels, office blocks and luxury apartments, Chinese interests, and the coun-
try’s ongoing geo-monsoonal fluctuations.62
Each year after returning from fieldwork, we reflected on, talked about, analyzed, edited,
mapped, and archived our material. For 5 years, we thought, read, talked, walked, ate, dreamt, and
slept the monsoon. It seeped onto our bodies and changed not only how we did research, but who
we were and how we saw and intra-acted with the world. Eventually, through brainstorming ses-
sions and research meetings, scouring over maps at different scales, using notes, trace-paper, post-
it notes, doodles, keywords, and bullet points we realized that what our research practice had done
was to inaugurate an array of improvised conversations with the monsoon, in which a range of
subjects – human, inhuman, nonhuman, infrastructural, and material – had participated, not as
objects of study, but as intra-locuting subjects of monsoonal weather worlds. At the same time, as
western researchers, we were acutely aware of the history of research as a colonial encounter and
of the extractive legacies and violence of the western eye. Linda Tuhiwai Smith reminded us that
Bremner et al. 13
Figure 8. (a) Jade stones in the Maha Aung Myay Jade market in Mandalay. Photograph by Lindsay
Bremner. (b) Polishing jade in the Maha Aung Myay Jade market in Mandalay. Photograph by Lindsay
Bremner. (c) Selling jade in the Maha Aung Myay Jade market in Mandalay. Photograph by Lindsay Bremner.
research is ‘one of the ways in which the underlying code of imperialism and colonialism is both
regulated and realised’.63 It turns places into field sites and people into objects of study.
Transmogrified in this way, colonized sites and subjects are appropriated as raw material for
knowledge production, denied any agency in the research process and their own forms of situated
knowledge either appropriated or rendered irrelevant. Monsoon as method attempted to construct
knowledge differently, seeing places, people, and nonhuman lives not as resources, but as actors
and agents in intra-active processes of knowledge production. It was a mode of intra-locutionary
research practice, producing a form of ‘partial, locatable, critical knowledge, and sustaining the
possibility of webs of connections called solidarity in politics and shared conversations in
epistemology’.64
While interlocution is an interchange of speech or a conversation between responding, autono-
mous agents, intra-locution by contrast, like Barad’s intra-action, suggests that conversations are
agential in producing subjects and that knowledge emerges relationally through conversational
practice. In our practice, intra-locutors were not only human, but also the material substances and
dynamics of atmospheres, air, groundwater, ocean, plastic, salt, and sediment; they were mon-
soonal infrastructures – bricks, khals, pipes, pots, and tanks, and nonhuman species – dragonflies,
hilsa fish, jackfruit, snakes, and weeds. These subjects drew our attention during fieldwork as
material-discursive phenomena caught in flows of monsoonal spacetimemattering. It was through
14 cultural geographies 00(0)
Figure 9. Early sketch of an idea for a book as a monsoonal volume. Drawing by Lindsay Bremner.
them that our knowledge of the entanglements of the monsoon in the composition of urban life
took shape. For us, intra-locution served as Galison’s theory machine, Haraway’s relational matrix,
or Barad’s apparatus.65 It was how we made sense of the entangled material-discursive flows in
which we and our intra-locutors were mutually entangled. Like all conversations, our intra-locu-
tions were inconclusive, riddled by relations of power, and full of gaps and inconsistencies, but
situated and potent. Knowledge followed from who the conversants were, where, how, and in what
language the conversation was conducted, how parties attuned to what was being said, what the
power relations were between them, who or what else participated in the conversation, what mis-
understandings it generated, how positions changed during the conversation, and so on. The mon-
soon that emerged from these improvised conversations was not universal or replicable, but situated
and onto-epistemological. Monsoon as method was an intra-actionist onto-episetomology produc-
ing situated, embodied knowledge of the monsoon through material entanglements between our-
selves and the people and stuff of monsoonal life worlds.
Formatting the monsoon
The outcomes of our research were in part political economy, in part agential materialism, in part
ethnography, in part cartography; textual, graphic, and photographic stories told in conferences,
academic papers, book chapters, and exhibitions. Our own book and online exhibition were
approached not only as representational media, but as formats for further thinking with the
monsoon.66
The book was thought of as a three dimensional monsoonal volume of essays, drawings, maps,
and photographs, partly inspired by nonrepresentational approaches that seek to convey the ‘vital-
ity, performativity, corporeality, sensuality, and mobility’ of life worlds (Figure 9).67 Instead of
being divided into a series of sequential chapters, the pages of the book were conceptualized as
spatio-material cuts through monsoonal mattering, from underground to surface to air. We pro-
posed to lay the writing out in parallel layers across each page, according to whether it narrated
aspects of the monsoon as air, surface, or underground, possibly using different fonts for each. This
format would have enabled readers to either follow a single monsoonal element as a thread
Bremner et al. 15
Figure 10. A speculative sectional drawing from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal through the city of
Dhaka. Drawing by John Cook.
throughout the book, or to move between one and another and back again. Texts would have been
interspersed with images and maps that cut across the spatio-material divisions, tying them together.
The contents page would have been organized as a geographic map in which texts were geolocated
and cross referenced. In this way we hoped that readers would experience something of the mobil-
ity and indivisibility of the monsoon as it circulated between land, sea, and sky and back again, and
of monsoonal dimensionality as an entanglement of scales and matters, rhythms and times, imagi-
naries and lived practices, in which they, the reader were now a part.68 When the time came to work
with a publisher however, we were reminded of the role that traditional publishing formats play in
reinforcing linear Western epistemological frameworks and ways of thinking. The book, as pub-
lished, is organized into typical chapters and sub-chapters, interspersed with maps, drawings, and
photographs, with small icons at the top of each page all that remains of the coding of the mon-
soon’s spatio-materiality as aerial, surficial, or subterranean.
The online exhibition offered alternative approaches to thinking non-representationally with the
monsoon.69 The exhibition was not incidentally digital; that is to say it was not an online version of
an analogue argument. A huge amount of data that had been generated by the project was digital-
first and digitally archived – 5 years of research, teaching, analysis, simulation, and proposition had
generated thousands of digital files: photographs from cameras and phones, screengrabs and down-
loaded files, data driven maps, videos; pdfs, jpgs, pngs, tiffs; photos and scans of analogue draw-
ings, archival scans, sounds files, generated gifs. The process of design was iterative and required
analysis, transfer and formatting of digital files, and collaborative conversations about meaning,
argument, and function. The exhibition, like the broader monsoonal method, engaged seriously with
what might be called a ‘digital monsoon’. This included, for example, dialogue with the Facebook
forecasts of R. Pradeep John, the ‘Tamil Nadu Weatherman’, an independent Chennai-based weather
forecaster and blogger.70 In addition to working with digital weather ontologies, the project had
deployed digital computational and design software in innovative and experimental ways to explore
the digital logics of the monsoon. For example, a speculative sectional drawing from the Himalayas
to the Bay of Bengal, through the city of Dhaka, simulated complex intra-actions between climatic
and tectonic forces through computation fluid dynamics software (Figure 10). In this sense then, the
16 cultural geographies 00(0)
Figure 11. Composite of screen shots of the Monsoonal Multiplicities exhibition. For an introduction to
the exhibition go here: https://youtu.be/K_1Fy6gnmhY and to visit the exhibition go here: http://exhibition.
monass.org/.
online exhibition attempted in multiple ways to not only represent the monsoon digitally but think
with the monsoon digitally and as digital.
The design of the exhibition was not tempted by metaphors of the monsoon that pursued a vis-
ual style of rain and deluge, or a watery, windy design language. Neither were we interested in digi-
tal navigation, website structures, interfaces or affordances that were monsoon-like – muddy,
flooded, or wet. Instead we set out with a strategy to use digital media to explore and articulate the
multiplicity and simultaneity of the monsoon. At all points, the visitor should be able to explore
and be confronted by its multiple scales, methods, experiences, and orientations.71 This strategy
meant that entry into the exhibition be as open-ended as possible with no correct or preferred mon-
soonal itinerary. The themes and subcategories of the exhibition were simply alphabetized: infra-
structures, interspecies interlocutors, framings, matters, and urban assemblages. As we explained
in the exhibition text: ‘The website has been designed to enable visitors to navigate rhizomatically
through the stories and themes – to scroll down, leap across, return, zoom in, pause, or in other
ways interact with their content without ever having to return to a home page. Navigation becomes
a way of constructing circulations and cross-cutting relations, providing visitors a virtual experi-
ence of the monsoon in all its multiplicity’. Because of way the navigation was designed, at all
points the viewer could see alternative scales, methods, experiences, or orientations (Figure 11). In
this sense, the exhibition was openly assembled, and that assembling was an open secret (in a
Bremner et al. 17
similar way the spine of the book was left exposed, a design choice which acknowledged the
assembling of the project). And while we prioritized clarity and usability, there were dramatic
moments curated to overwhelm the arbitrary boundaries of the themes we had set up as heuristics.
These managed moments of interruption gesture to the excess of the monsoon and its agency.
Conclusion
This paper has discussed a non-formulaic, situated, relational method for researching the mon-
soon in three cities in south and southeast Asia, with replicable potential in other monsoonal
contexts and indeed, other weather climes. The theoretical framework the paper elaborated has
much in common with other cultural geographies of weather, but it differs from them in some
key respects.
Firstly, it sheds doubt on the human-centric idea of the weather as a medium of human exist-
ence.72 Instead, the paper has argued that material, human and more-than human existence and the
weather are mutually constituted, entangled agencies, in what Barad calls ‘the iterative becoming
of spacetimemattering’.73 The earth is demonstrably alive and does not exist solely, or incidentally,
as a stage or a medium for the enactment of human history.74 Whilst the weather always exists, to
some extent, as a byproduct of human actions, whether at micro- or macro-scales, the ‘beings and
becomings of weather have their own knowledges, their own survivances and their own sovereign-
ties’, and its self-organizing and self-differentiating tendencies contribute to all [human] modes of
being, doing, and knowing.75 Weather, in Clark and Szerszynski’s view, is a response to unresolv-
able tensions that arise from the interplay of forces set up by the revolution of the Earth around the
sun and the need to dissipate solar energy and the build-up of energy from its molten core.76
Volcanos and earthquakes, air fronts, circulations, convections, winds, breezes, currents, storms,
cyclones, and so forth are incomplete solutions to the interplay of these never-ending forces. In
never quite solving the Earth’s problems, the weather’s partial solutions exert agency and trans-
formative power within the complexity of the material, discursive, human, and more-than-human
relations that make up urban worlds, which reshape them in turn. As the pressures that extractive
human economies are putting the Earth under increase, the weather’s solutions are changing, and
with them, the weather worlds and weather ways of those living within them.77
Secondly, in researching our three sites, and in contrast to many other cultural geographies of
weather, monsoon as method recognized the affordances offered by matter and other-than-human
lives for generating knowledge of weather. It eschewed an exclusively human lens, recognizing
that it is not only humans who experience, are weathered by and change the weather; everything on
this planet weathers, and in doing so, thinks, acts, responds to, and becomes entangled with weather
differently. We suggest that thinking with the more-than-human matter and other-than-human spe-
cies of changing weather worlds is necessary to overcome human exceptionalism and to contribute
to the profound epistemological, ontological, political, and economic shifts that are going to be
required for humans to weather the ravages of climate change, with its ‘fearsome capacity . . . to
undo sustaining connections and footings’, and to build a more equitable, caring, multispecies
world.78
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge the following organizations which supported the research on which
this paper is based: Care Earth Trust and the Perungudi Lake Area Neighborhood Association in Chennai, the
Bengal institute of Architecture Landscapes and Settlements, and Research Initiatives Bangladesh in Dhaka;
Blue Temple Architecture Design in Yangon, as well as many others who gave of their time for interviews
18 cultural geographies 00(0)
and conversations during the course of our research. We would also like to thank the editors of the journal and
reviewers of the paper for their generous and helpful comments.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publica-
tion of this article: undertaken as part of Monsoon Assemblages, European Research Council grant number
679873.
ORCID iD
Lindsay Bremner https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7687-8325
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9. N.Clark, Inhuman Nature, Sociable life on a Dynamic Planet (London: Sage, 2011).
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11. Ingold, ‘Earth, Sky, Wind, Weather’ and ‘Weather-World’.
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13. Vianinni et al., ‘Making Sense of the Weather’.
14. deVet, Weather Ways and deVet and Head, ‘Everyday Weather-Ways’.
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Perspective’, Feminist Studies, 14(3), 1988, pp. 575–99.
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the-philosophy-of-deleuze-and-guattari>
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Feminisms (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2008), p. 130.
27. Barad, Meeting the University Halfway, p. 28.
28. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 135.
29. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 135.
30. Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway, p. 33.
31. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 133.
32. Barad, Meeting the University Halfway, p. 234.
33. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 135.
34. Barad, Meeting the University Halfway, p. 338.
35. M.Sheldrake, Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape our Futures
(London: Bodley Head, 2020), p. 48.
36. Sheldrake, Entangled Life, p. 45.
37. V.Kirby, Quantum Anthropologies: Life at Large (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011), p. 66.
38. Sheldrake, Entangled Life, pp. 57–8.
39. Ingold, ‘Materials Against Materiality’, p. 14.
40. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 135.
41. Barad, ‘Posthumanist Performativity’, p. 147.
42. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, p. 23.
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(eds), Material Feminisms (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2008), pp. 237–64; T.Alaimo,
Bodily Natures: Science, Environment and the Material Self (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press,
2010).
20 cultural geographies 00(0)
45. T.Alaimo, ‘Trans-Corporeality’, in R.Braidotti and M.Hlavajova (eds), Posthuman Glossary (London,
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46. Neimanis and Walker, ‘Weathering’, p. 558.
47. Neimanis and Walker, ‘Weathering’, p. 570.
48. Neimanis and Hamilton, ‘Open Space Weathering’, p. 81.
49. Neimanis and Hamilton, ‘Open Space Weathering’, p. 82.
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Fish’; and ‘Earth Goddesses, Snakes and the Monsoon’; H.Bhat, ‘Stickiness of the Halasina Hannu’;
L.Bremner, ‘Architecture, Weeds and the Chemical Calculus of Decay’; in L.Bremner (ed.), Monsoon as
Method, Assembling Monsoonal Multiplicities (Barcelona: Actar, 2022), pp. 316–25, 326–33, 338–45,
334–37, and 346–51.
59. B.Cullen, ‘Dhaka, a City Woven from Water’; and ‘Bangla Bricks: Constellations of Monsoonal
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pp. 264–73, and ‘Sedimentary Ways’, GeoHumanities, 7(7), 2020, pp. 24–43.
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pp. 108–143 and ‘Jade Urbanism’, e-flux Architecture, ‘Accumulation’, <https://www.e-flux.com/
architecture/accumulation/378157/jade-urbanism/>
63. L.T.Smith, Decolonising Methodologies, 2nd ed. (London: Zed Books, 2012), p. 8.
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<http://exhibition.monass.org/>
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Bremner et al. 21
69. <http://exhibition.monass.org/>
70. <https://www.facebook.com/tamilnaduweatherman>
71. This strategy is evident in the video made for the launch of the exhibition, available here: <https://youtu.
be/K_1Fy6gnmhY>
72. T.Ingold, ‘The Eye of the Storm: Visual Perception and the Weather’, Visual Studies, 20, 2005, pp.
97–104; Ingold, ‘Earth, Sky, Wind, and Weather’.
73. Barad, Meeting the University Halfway, p. 234.
74. A.Gosh and S.Datta, ‘Under the Grey Skies’, The Hindu, 30 July 2018 <https://www.thehindu.com/
opinion/op-ed/under-the-grey-skies/article24547372.ece>
75. Wright and Tofa, ‘Weather Geographies’, p. 1126.
76. Clark and Szerszynski, Planetary Social Thought, p. 172.
77. Hulme, Weathered.
78. Clark, Inhuman Nature, p. xvi.
Author biographies
Lindsay Bremner is a research architect in the School of Architecture and Cities at the University of
Westminster. From 2016 to 2021 she led the ERC project, Monsoon Assemblages. She currently leads a
British Academy project, ‘Reimagining the Good City from Ennore Creek’, and the UKRI Proof of Concept
grant, Climate Cartographics.
Beth Cullen is an anthropologist, independent consultant and visiting lecturer in the School of Architecture
and Cities at the University of Westminster. She was a postdoctoral research fellow for Monsoon Assemblages
from 2016 to 2021. Beth’s research interests include environmental anthropology, more-than-human ethnog-
raphy and participatory approaches for working with socio-ecological systems.
Jonathan Cane is a research fellow at the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity, University of
York. He holds a PhD in Art History from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and is the
author of Civilising Grass: The Art of the Lawn on the South African Highveld (2019).
Christina Geros is an architect, landscape architect and urban designer whose design and research critically
engages knowledge infrastructures and rights frameworks within climate- and neuro-ecologies. She is cur-
rently a tutor in MA Environmental Architecture at the RCA and in MA/MLA Landscape Architecture at The
Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.