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As contemporary socio-ecological challenges such as climate change
and biodiversity preservation have become more important, the three
pillars concept has increasingly been used in planning and policy
circles as a framework for analysis and action. However, the issue
of how culture influences sustainability is still an underexplored
theme. Understanding how culture can act as a resource to promote
sustainability, rather than a barrier, is the key to the
development of cultural sustainability. This book explores the
interfaces between nature and culture through the perspective of
cultural sustainability. A cultural perspective on environmental
sustainability enables a renewal of sustainability discourse and
practices across rural and urban landscapes, natural and cultural
systems, stressing heterogeneity and complexity. The book focuses
on the nature-culture interface conceptualised as a place where
experiences, practices, policies, ideas and knowledge meet, are
negotiated, discussed and resolved. Rather than looking for lost
unities, or an imaginary view of harmonious relationships between
humans and nature based in the past, it explores cases of
interfaces that are context-sensitive and which consciously convey
the problems of scale and time. While calling attention to a
cultural or 'culturalised' view of the sustainability debate, this
book questions the radical nature-culture dualism dominating
positive modern thinking as well as its underlying view of nature
as pre-given and independent from human life.
As contemporary socio-ecological challenges such as climate change
and biodiversity preservation have become more important, the three
pillars concept has increasingly been used in planning and policy
circles as a framework for analysis and action. However, the issue
of how culture influences sustainability is still an underexplored
theme. Understanding how culture can act as a resource to promote
sustainability, rather than a barrier, is the key to the
development of cultural sustainability. This book explores the
interfaces between nature and culture through the perspective of
cultural sustainability. A cultural perspective on environmental
sustainability enables a renewal of sustainability discourse and
practices across rural and urban landscapes, natural and cultural
systems, stressing heterogeneity and complexity. The book focuses
on the nature-culture interface conceptualised as a place where
experiences, practices, policies, ideas and knowledge meet, are
negotiated, discussed and resolved. Rather than looking for lost
unities, or an imaginary view of harmonious relationships between
humans and nature based in the past, it explores cases of
interfaces that are context-sensitive and which consciously convey
the problems of scale and time. While calling attention to a
cultural or 'culturalised' view of the sustainability debate, this
book questions the radical nature-culture dualism dominating
positive modern thinking as well as its underlying view of nature
as pre-given and independent from human life.
Making Place, Making Self explores new understandings of place and
place-making in late modernity, covering key themes of place and
space, tourism and mobility, sexual difference and subjectivity.
Using a series of individual life stories, it develops a
fascinating polyvocal account of leisure and life journeys. These
stories focus on journeys made to the North Cape in Norway, the
most northern point of mainland Europe, which is both a tourist
destination and an evocation of a reliable and secure point of
reference, an idea that gives meaning to an individual's life. The
theoretical core of the book draws on an inter-weaving of
post-Lacanian versions of feminist psycho-analytical thinking with
phenomenological and existential thinking, where place-making is
linked with self-making and homecoming. By combining such
ground-breaking theory with her innovative use of case studies,
Inger Birkeland here provides a major contribution to the fields of
cultural geography, tourism and feminist studies.
Making Place, Making Self explores new understandings of place and
place-making in late modernity, covering key themes of place and
space, tourism and mobility, sexual difference and subjectivity.
Using a series of individual life stories, it develops a
fascinating polyvocal account of leisure and life journeys. These
stories focus on journeys made to the North Cape in Norway, the
most northern point of mainland Europe, which is both a tourist
destination and an evocation of a reliable and secure point of
reference, an idea that gives meaning to an individual's life. The
theoretical core of the book draws on an inter-weaving of
post-Lacanian versions of feminist psycho-analytical thinking with
phenomenological and existential thinking, where place-making is
linked with self-making and homecoming. By combining such
ground-breaking theory with her innovative use of case studies,
Inger Birkeland, here, provides a major contribution to the fields
of cultural geography, tourism, and feminist studies.
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