Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego

Liminality of the Cultural Landscape According to Tim Ingold, cultural landscape is not „land” nor „space”, but is a dweller’s narration on the reality that surrounds him or her. This narration is in permanent process, it grows with the society that lives in a certain place, parts of it die with...

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Autor principal: Wojciech Bedyński
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
PL
Publicado: Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing 2019
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/e3ba5f2fda7941329fe881d50a00206f
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e3ba5f2fda7941329fe881d50a00206f2021-11-27T13:13:43ZLiminalność krajobrazu kulturowego10.12797/Politeja.16.2019.58.031733-67162391-6737https://doaj.org/article/e3ba5f2fda7941329fe881d50a00206f2019-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.akademicka.pl/politeja/article/view/952https://doaj.org/toc/1733-6716https://doaj.org/toc/2391-6737 Liminality of the Cultural Landscape According to Tim Ingold, cultural landscape is not „land” nor „space”, but is a dweller’s narration on the reality that surrounds him or her. This narration is in permanent process, it grows with the society that lives in a certain place, parts of it die with the people that pass away. Although it is subject to individual reception, some narrations are shared by many. Therefore it is both personal and social phenomenon. This narrative landscape is full of borders and spheres that are built on symbolic values of places and objects. In traditional societies it has been well visible – one could easily distinct the narration of the forest from the narration of the village. In the modern world the landscape has gone through a major transformation, nonetheless it kept crucial mechanisms of its construction. Contemporary multi‑sited landscapes or virtual landscapes also contain borders and spheres, are individual and shared by many. This article presents recent changes in the approach to the liminality of the cultural landscape, differences that were experienced when passing from traditional to modern society. This change is particularly visible when comparing generations: new global generation (generation Y, generation Z) has a different experience of the landscape than generation of their parents and grandparents – who had grown in a still local and territorially defined places. But new landscapes do have borders and spheres, however their shape may be slightly different. Wojciech BedyńskiKsiegarnia Akademicka Publishingarticlecultural landscapemulti‑sited ethnographymigrationLawKPolitical scienceJENPLPoliteja, Vol 16, Iss 1(58) (2019)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
PL
topic cultural landscape
multi‑sited ethnography
migration
Law
K
Political science
J
spellingShingle cultural landscape
multi‑sited ethnography
migration
Law
K
Political science
J
Wojciech Bedyński
Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
description Liminality of the Cultural Landscape According to Tim Ingold, cultural landscape is not „land” nor „space”, but is a dweller’s narration on the reality that surrounds him or her. This narration is in permanent process, it grows with the society that lives in a certain place, parts of it die with the people that pass away. Although it is subject to individual reception, some narrations are shared by many. Therefore it is both personal and social phenomenon. This narrative landscape is full of borders and spheres that are built on symbolic values of places and objects. In traditional societies it has been well visible – one could easily distinct the narration of the forest from the narration of the village. In the modern world the landscape has gone through a major transformation, nonetheless it kept crucial mechanisms of its construction. Contemporary multi‑sited landscapes or virtual landscapes also contain borders and spheres, are individual and shared by many. This article presents recent changes in the approach to the liminality of the cultural landscape, differences that were experienced when passing from traditional to modern society. This change is particularly visible when comparing generations: new global generation (generation Y, generation Z) has a different experience of the landscape than generation of their parents and grandparents – who had grown in a still local and territorially defined places. But new landscapes do have borders and spheres, however their shape may be slightly different.
format article
author Wojciech Bedyński
author_facet Wojciech Bedyński
author_sort Wojciech Bedyński
title Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
title_short Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
title_full Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
title_fullStr Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
title_full_unstemmed Liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
title_sort liminalność krajobrazu kulturowego
publisher Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing
publishDate 2019
url https://doaj.org/article/e3ba5f2fda7941329fe881d50a00206f
work_keys_str_mv AT wojciechbedynski liminalnosckrajobrazukulturowego
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