Place and Placelessness: What Is The Main Argument Presented?
Place and Placelessness: What Is The Main Argument Presented?
Place and Placelessness: What Is The Main Argument Presented?
(1976)
Questions
1. …
2. …
3. …
non paginated
PREFACE
Placelessness = scientific method, place = phenomenology, difference vs sameness
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1 PLACE AND THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL BASIS OF GEOGRAPHY
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2 SPACE AND PLACE
Diverse meanings of place lie on a continuum from direct experience to abstract thought, e.g.
built environment, individual perception, geometric space.
phenomenology; place 02/02/2021
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3 THE ESSENCE OF PLACE
Problem with trying to clarify what ‘place’ is comes from the intersection and interweaving of
many facets of existence and understanding of the world. But looking at these properties reveals
importance to our experience.
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4 ON THE IDENTITY OF PLACES
Finding a middle ground between subjective individual experience and generalised description.
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Identity can be considered as:
Components of the identity of places
Forms and levels of outsideness and insideness (identity with places)
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Norberg-Schulz (1971, 25) ‘to be inside is the primary intention behind the place concept;
that is to be somewhere, away from what is outside’
Bachelard (1969, p.211 and pp 217-218) ‘outside and inside form a dialectic of division, the
obvious geometry of which blinds us… . Outside and inside are both intimate – they are
always ready to be reversed, to exchange their hostility.’
- E.g. going to the countryside and returning to the city
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Perceptual space, egocentrically constructed, organised concentrically from home to away –
defines where is ‘outside’, but boundary between are not sharp
Anthropology and levels of assimilation:
- Behavioural, empathetic, cognitive
Less direct ways of experiencing insideness and outsideness:
- Vicarious insideness through novels for example
- Incidental outsideness – places are backgrounds for other activities (e.g. laboratory)
- Objective outsideness – places as concepts and locations
- Existential outsideness – profound alienation from all places
phenomenology; place 02/02/2021
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Understanding what it is like to be ‘here’:
Behavioural insideness
- Kind of recognition of where you are based on external cues and immediate experience
Empathetic insideness
- Overlap with behavioural. More to do with emotional and empathetic involvement rather
than physical/visual qualities
Existential insideness
- A place where you belong existentially
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- Steinbeck The Grapes of Wrath (1969, 39): ‘Funny thing how it is. If a man owns a little
property, that property is him, it’s part of him, and it’s like him. If he owns property
only so he can walk on it and handle and be sad when it isn’t doing well and feel fine
when the rain falls on it, that property is him, and in some way he’s bigger because he
owns it. Even if he isn’t successful he’s big with his property. That is so.’
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Images and identities of places
Boulding (1961): an image is ‘a mental picture that is a product of experiences, attitudes,
memories, and immediate sensations. It is used to interpret information and to guide
behaviour, for it offers a relatively stable ordering of relationships between meaningful
objects and concepts.’ Paraphrased by Relph
For some the image may be superficial and biased but for the holders of the image they might
be ‘complete and constitute the reality of that place.’
Vertical and horizontal structuring:
- Vertical: intensity and depth of experience, levels of outside and inside
- Horizontal: social distribution between individuals, groups and the mass
Individual Images
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- ‘Identity of a place varies with the intentions, personalities and circumstances of those
who are experiencing it.’
Group Images
- Individual images are not completely independent, as they are socialised through
common language, symbols and experiences (Berger and Luckmann, 1967, pp130-132
and pp 32-36)
- Interaction if the I, Other and We (Gurvitch 1971, p.xiv):
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