1992
DOI: 10.1080/01445170.1992.10410571
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The ideology of the nature garden. Nationalistic trends in garden design in Germany during the early twentieth century

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Cited by 12 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, the current study emphasizes that the landscape concept is going to change in the changing world (O'Donoghue, Sandoval-Rivera, & Payyappallimana, 2019). (Morris, 1979) (unspecified) Spiritual Greece Garden (Wolschke-Bulmahn & Groening, 1992) (unspecified) Political, ideological, economic, and social Ideology and patriotism (Mazrui, 1993) (Owusu, 1993) Destruction of natural form in Africa…”
Section: Insight Into the Gardens As A Manmade Elementmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, the current study emphasizes that the landscape concept is going to change in the changing world (O'Donoghue, Sandoval-Rivera, & Payyappallimana, 2019). (Morris, 1979) (unspecified) Spiritual Greece Garden (Wolschke-Bulmahn & Groening, 1992) (unspecified) Political, ideological, economic, and social Ideology and patriotism (Mazrui, 1993) (Owusu, 1993) Destruction of natural form in Africa…”
Section: Insight Into the Gardens As A Manmade Elementmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The studies have theorised that both the meaning and form of gardens have changed from a spiritual form into the functional and political forms in the whole of the history of the world (Pregill & Volkman, 1999;Eyres, 2013). For example, the study of Jackson proclaimed that the landscape represents the political and cultural aspects of society more than an ecological concept (Jackson, 1979), in terms of unseparated part of the social and political condition in a specific period based on the ideology (Wolschke-Bulmahn & Groening, 1992), and sense of patriotism based on the nationalism movement (Milam, 2017).…”
Section: Insight Into the Gardens As A Manmade Elementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This conflation between nativeness and naturalness meant that what belonged nationally belonged ecologically and the other way around. This was most evident in the Nazi approach to gardening and landscaping (Wolschke-Bulmahn & Groening, 1992, 2002, with for instance the project of planting only native species along the new German motorways being justified with the same blueprint for racial purity: "to cleanse the German landscape of unharmonious foreign substance" (Gould, 1998, p. 3).…”
Section: The Naturalisation Of Nationmentioning
confidence: 99%