Geog1. Interpreting Places and Landscapes
Geog1. Interpreting Places and Landscapes
How the environment shapes & is shaped by people How it is perceived & understood by people
VISUALIZING LANDSCAPES
Landscapes
Natural Landscape Cultural Landscape
Cultural Landscape
A characteristic and tangible outcome of the complex interactions between a human group and a natural environment
cultural Landscape
Archive of society
Reflection of
of evidence about our character and experience, our struggles & triumphs as humans
Types of Landscape
Ordinary/Vernacular Landscape Symbolic Landscape
Types of Landscape
1.) Ordinary landscapes (vernacular)
Everyday landscapes that people create in the course of their lives Landscapes that are lived-in and changed
Influence and change the perceptions, values, and behaviors
Types of Landscape
1.) Ordinary landscapes (vernacular)
Work Social activities School
Types of Landscape
2.) Symbolic landscapes
Representations of particular values, or aspirations, that the builders & financiers of those landscapes want to impart to a larger public
Symbolic Landscape
Landscapes of power Landscapes of despair Derelict landscapes
Landscape as Text
Like a book, landscapes can be read and written by groups and individuals. Landscapes do not come ready-made with labels on them. There are readers and writers
Landscape
Landscape
Many cultural landscapes exist in any single place Quiapo School Reflect the lives of ordinary people, as well as the more powerful
Study of Landscape
Humanistic approach
Places individual at the center of analysis Values, meanings, intentions..
Study of Landscape
Humanistic approach
Critique:
individual group
Study of Landscape
Alternative:
Larger forces and individuals
Culture, gender, government Enhance or constrains individual lives Two-way
Place-making
Territory
Provides a source of physical safety & security A source of stimulation A physical expression of bull identity
breeding areas December and January
beach areas that offer protection from the winter storms and high surf wave action
Harem
Place-making
Territory
Place-making
Territory When a territory is threatened defend it attack the territory of the attacker suffer the trauma of invasion overcrowding
Place-making
Territoriality
Claiming space
Unwritten territorial rules
1. regular use 2. use of spatial markers 3. bubbles or areas of personal space that we try not to invade (or allow to be invaded by others)
Place-making
Personal space different people within those cultures, may have quite different ideas of personal space.
"typical" Swiss prefers a distance of twelve to eighteen inches "typical" Japanese prefers about two arm's lengths both of which may discomfort many Americans.
friends
Place-making
Proxemics
Study of the social & cultural meanings that people give to personal space.
Sense of place
People and places through territoriality
Place-making
Sense of place
Feelings evoked among people as a result of the experiences, memories, & symbolism that they associate with a given place
Place is important to us, that its loss can be traumatic Insiders feel at home
Sentimental
Affective bonds with places Become significant to individuals (special attachment or sense of identity or belonging) Home, school, city,country
T O P O P H IL I A
Cognitive Images
what people see in the minds eye when they think of a particular place or setting
Information
Perception
Cognition
Recall
Environmental Images
Senses
Culture
Cognitive images
Influence behavior
People go to places they regard as attractive, relaxing, reassuring, they tend to avoid places they regard as repellant and fearsome