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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 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
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).
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control’ N. Clark (2010) ‘Volatile Worlds, Vulnerable Bodies’, TCS, p.47 Landscape names ‘the thought of presence as withdrawn from itself: estranged and unsettled presence, from which all the gods have departed and the humans are always still to come’ J-N Nancy (2005) ‘Uncanny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
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.