Cultural Geography
Edenic rurality featuring orange groves, strawberry fields, palms and roses set against distant blue mountains under a golden sk ...
elements, drawing on ecology’s authority as science to determine ‘natural’ occurrence and locational propriety. American nativis ...
of male reason and ingenuity is a consistent trope. Feminist critics and artists have sought to rework modernist associations be ...
economic and cultural globalization, international labour migration and new communications technologies have reworked the bonds ...
zone of characteristic nature. Originating national parks in the western United States date from the fin-de-siècledecades of int ...
transformation of landscape and indeed of the native environmental and spatial knowledge necessary to initial European explorati ...
Alpers, S. (1984) The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Anderson, B ...
Gold, J.R. (1980) An Introduction to Behavioral Geography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Gold, J.R. and Revill, G. (1999) ‘La ...
Norwood, V. and Monk, J. (eds) (1987) The Desert Is No Lady: Southwestern Landscapes in Women’s Writing and Art. New Haven: Yale ...
Unlike the other contributors to this section, I do not use ‘landscape’ as a regular part of my academic vocabulary. Frankly I a ...
position for the viewer and a particular form for that which is being seen. We have become used to the importing of hard science ...
account. Rather than provide accounts of distinctive regional material landscapes, geogra- phers began to see landscape as resid ...
landscape. We might even go further and say that some humanists believe that landscape exists only inside the heads of people as ...
masks the artificial and ideological nature of its form and content. Its history as a social construction is unexamined. It is, ...
on the ‘oblivion’ and ‘misunderstanding of practices’ (1984: 93). We do not have to read de Certeau to come across such observat ...
over he returned to New Mexico and, following a riding accident, decided to match the European geography publications with an Am ...
concerned with what he called the ‘body-subject’. The work of Brentano and Husserl had led to the key idea that consciousness is ...
time he calls it a ‘time–space routine’. This describes the habits of a person as they follow a routine path through the day – d ...
easily be ‘decoded’ as there is no code that it can be reduced to. Instead landscape is brought into being through social praxis ...
has none of the dogmatism of the theatrical performance, or architectronics and that distanced aesthetic – framed up, laid out f ...
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