2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0016-7185(02)00030-1
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Landscape and labyrinths

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Cited by 127 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…Rose 2002). Landscape researchers need to understand some of these diverse characteristics and embodied features of walking practices and modes of apprehending landscape prior to utilising walking methods.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rose 2002). Landscape researchers need to understand some of these diverse characteristics and embodied features of walking practices and modes of apprehending landscape prior to utilising walking methods.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 The ensuing shift from topo-graphical to topo-logical approaches (Thrift, 2000(Thrift, , 2004 emphasizes the process of construction of space/landscape. It challenges the weight of space/ landscape representations over human agency by focusing on the process of construction of space/landscape through social relations networks, practices, connective properties, dynamic flows and vital forces making landscape become what it is (Lorimer, 2005;Rose, 2002). Such topological approaches have recently been questioned for their tendency to overlook basic dimensions of our perception (and experience) of landscape, such as shadows, depth, colours, relief or contours, because these dimensions were considered as being exclusively representational.…”
Section: Opportunities For Field Research: Emerging Research Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…95 These tensions are part of the ongoing dynamics of the personal garden community, part of its exuberance, its inscrutability, its unpredictability -all of which in turn are part of what Sarah Whatmore calls "the livingness of the world" 96 and what Mitch Rose describes as "the overabundance of life in general." 97 When a gardener engages with the garden space, she or he enters into a complex relationship with the living life of the garden, including its many non-human and human residents and visitors, as well as human constructions and artefacts. Associations among the many non-human garden residents/visitors, plus relations between them and the garden environment, influence the relationship between the gardener and the garden.…”
Section: Tension In Paradisementioning
confidence: 99%