Non‐Representational Approaches to Body–Landscape Relations
Identifieur interne : 000434 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000433; suivant : 000435Non‐Representational Approaches to Body–Landscape Relations
Auteurs : Hannah Macpherson [Royaume-Uni]Source :
- Geography Compass [ 1749-8198 ] ; 2010-01.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Animating landscape, Author journal compilation, Blackwell, Blackwell publishing, Bodylandscape relations, British countryside, British geographers, Complementary terms, Comprehensive review, Countryside agency, Critical summary, Cultural geographers, Cultural geographies, Cultural geography, Dewsbury, Disability, Disabled body, Disabled people, Dordrecht press, English countryside, Fragments landscapes fragments, Geographer, Geographical essays, Geography, Geography compass, Harrison, Human experience, Human geographies, Human geography, Impairment, Landscape, Landscape concept, Lorimer, Macpherson, Material culture, Material landscape, Mccormack, Methodological approaches, Methodological challenges, Minnesota press, More describable, Noble books, Object world, Ordinary landscapes, Orkney hill land, Oxford university press, Particular landscapes, Phenomenology, Photo essay, Potential place, Recent approaches, Recent work, Researcher, Routledge, Social life, Such approaches, Thrift, User illusion, Visual impairment, Visual impairments, White cane, Wylie.
Abstract
This short paper offers a critical summary of some of the key themes of non‐representational theory (NRT), with a particular focus on recent approaches to body‐landscape relations and the potential place of disability in these accounts. NRT in British human geography has encouraged an emphasis on the embodied, practiced and habitual qualities of embodied experience. Recent non‐representational work on landscape has developed these agendas to show how landscape may be thought of as a ‘process’ (Rose 2002) or ‘tension’ which potentially ‘animates’ the embodied subject (Rose and Wylie 2006). Here the body and the landscape are understood to be complimentary concepts that are useful to think through together – each in a constant process of ‘becoming’ through the other. This paper reflects on the methodological challenges of researching such non‐representational body‐landscape relations, showing how researchers have drawn on insights of disciplines as diverse as neuroscience and performance studies to address this challenge.
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-8198.2009.00276.x
Affiliations:
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Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">This short paper offers a critical summary of some of the key themes of non‐representational theory (NRT), with a particular focus on recent approaches to body‐landscape relations and the potential place of disability in these accounts. NRT in British human geography has encouraged an emphasis on the embodied, practiced and habitual qualities of embodied experience. Recent non‐representational work on landscape has developed these agendas to show how landscape may be thought of as a ‘process’ (Rose 2002) or ‘tension’ which potentially ‘animates’ the embodied subject (Rose and Wylie 2006). Here the body and the landscape are understood to be complimentary concepts that are useful to think through together – each in a constant process of ‘becoming’ through the other. This paper reflects on the methodological challenges of researching such non‐representational body‐landscape relations, showing how researchers have drawn on insights of disciplines as diverse as neuroscience and performance studies to address this challenge.</div>
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