1993
DOI: 10.2307/j.ctt20h6sc9
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Mapping the Invisible Landscape

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Cited by 138 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The bonding routes in the human domain are based on the reviewed literature, and are empirically conceptualized by Poe et al (2016), who suggest that a person's SoP is derived from four processes (not to be confused with the process component of SoP): use of the marine environment; connections to the marine environment; emotional and sensory experiences; and associated human interactions. We also support our choice of bonding routes by additional literature not reviewed above, including the influence of the following: aesthetics (Yi-Fu 1974), cultural use , Thompson 2016; the telling of stories (Ryden 1993, Marks et al 2016; being engaged and through exposure (Brinckerhoff 1994), and having mythical and spiritual connections (Steele 1981, Low 1992. For the bonding routes for the marine environment, links are made via native/ endemic areas (Forristal et al 2014); natural areas (Lin and Lockwood 2014); unspoilt environments (Cox et al 2006, Keske et al 2017; system health (Horwitz et al 2001); and waterscapes (Pitt 2018).…”
Section: A Framework For Incorporating Sense Of Place Into the Managesupporting
confidence: 62%
“…The bonding routes in the human domain are based on the reviewed literature, and are empirically conceptualized by Poe et al (2016), who suggest that a person's SoP is derived from four processes (not to be confused with the process component of SoP): use of the marine environment; connections to the marine environment; emotional and sensory experiences; and associated human interactions. We also support our choice of bonding routes by additional literature not reviewed above, including the influence of the following: aesthetics (Yi-Fu 1974), cultural use , Thompson 2016; the telling of stories (Ryden 1993, Marks et al 2016; being engaged and through exposure (Brinckerhoff 1994), and having mythical and spiritual connections (Steele 1981, Low 1992. For the bonding routes for the marine environment, links are made via native/ endemic areas (Forristal et al 2014); natural areas (Lin and Lockwood 2014); unspoilt environments (Cox et al 2006, Keske et al 2017; system health (Horwitz et al 2001); and waterscapes (Pitt 2018).…”
Section: A Framework For Incorporating Sense Of Place Into the Managesupporting
confidence: 62%
“…These narratives bring together elements from the past and the present of a region in a selective way. Sometimes they are well-documented 'written identities', and at others they are stories that exist and circulate in oral histories and folklore (Ryden 1993). Factual identity means those forms of identity that may manifest themselves in social action, e.g.…”
Section: A Symbolic Shape That Manifests Itself Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Massey offers no avenue for exploring the everyday, lived and felt geographies of less omniscient subjects. Humanists, by contrast, explore place as it is emerges from the sensory and imaginative experience of subjects ensconced within ambient environments (see, for example, Ryden 1993;Tuan 1977;de Witt 2003). An awareness of place at this level is, I believe, the main deliverable of humanistic to human geography.…”
Section: A Space For Humanistic Geography? Criticisms Of Humanistic Cmentioning
confidence: 96%