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Unsettling Landscape

Unsettling Landscape. Dr John Wylie Associate Prof of Cultural Geography University of Exeter j.w.wylie@exeter.ac.uk. 1. Concepts of landscape, locality, and environmental change. 2. Unsettling landscape: vulnerability and un-homeliness.

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Unsettling Landscape

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  1. Unsettling Landscape Dr John Wylie Associate Prof of Cultural Geography University of Exeter j.w.wylie@exeter.ac.uk

  2. 1. Concepts of landscape, locality, and environmental change 2. Unsettling landscape: vulnerability and un-homeliness

  3. 1. Concepts of landscape, locality, and environmental change ‘A focus on the familiar landscapes of everyday life offers an opportunity to examine how climate change could be researched as a relational phenomenon, understood on a local level’ (Brace & Geoghagen, 2011, p.284) ‘It is part of our argument that landscape – in all its multifarious definitions and theorizations – grounds an understanding of climate and the ways it might change in a fundamental way’ (ibid, pp.288-289).

  4. 2. Unsettling landscape: vulnerability and un-homeliness ‘Thinking through the human in terms of a constitutive vulnerability to forces beyond its control’ N. Clark (2010) ‘Volatile Worlds, Vulnerable Bodies’, TCS, p.47 Landscape names ‘the thought of presence as withdrawn from itself: estranged and unsettled presence, from which all the gods have departed and the humans are always still to come’ J-N Nancy (2005) ‘Uncanny Landscape’ p.62

  5. From ‘The Grounds’ by Phillip Gross (The Water Table, 2009) Indefinable grounds: don’t try to set foot, not even if some craft could steady in these mud-thick shallows (almost ground) by ground almost as loose as water. Don’t count on your fine distinctions then.

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