The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid

The paper describes the transformation of derelict land into a 'town-green' and the role legislation played in transforming social and natural relationships. Town-green denotes a legal status under the Great Britain Commons Act (2006) that protects certain open spaces from building develop...

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Main Author: Louis Rice
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Linköping University Electronic Press 2014-10-01
Series:Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.146981
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spelling doaj-43afd82ed3264b8b8e22aae479607b722020-11-24T23:32:03ZengLinköping University Electronic PressCulture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research2000-15252014-10-016598199610.3384/cu.2000.1525.146981The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green HybridLouis RiceThe paper describes the transformation of derelict land into a 'town-green' and the role legislation played in transforming social and natural relationships. Town-green denotes a legal status under the Great Britain Commons Act (2006) that protects certain open spaces from building development; the status requires that a space must simultaneously have a specific social quality (i.e. 'town-ness') and a specific natural quality (i.e. 'green-ness'). This hybrid condition requires an alliance between society and nature in a certain configuration (referred to here as nature2 and society2). In this empirical study it involved the participation and consensus of local residents, volunteer gardeners as well as nature itself; flowers needed to bloom and grass had to grow in order for the hybrid town-green status to be conferred. There are two distinct phases of this transformation; the first is the change in identities and configuration of the constituents of town and green. This involved the production of a modified 'real' world with: different plants and flowers; reconfigured spatial arrangements; as well as different social actors. The second phase is a shift from changes in the "real" world towards an 'enmap' - a displacement of myriad actors into documentation. This transfer from a complex messy reality into an enmap permitted the legitimation of the new network to be accepted as a 'town-green'. What the research reveals, other than hints for gardeners and community activists, is how material and non-material; social and natural; spatial, discursive and temporal worlds are hybridised.http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.146981Hybridactor-networkspacepowerinformalurban
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louis Rice
spellingShingle Louis Rice
The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Hybrid
actor-network
space
power
informal
urban
author_facet Louis Rice
author_sort Louis Rice
title The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
title_short The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
title_full The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
title_fullStr The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
title_full_unstemmed The Nature of Society: Enmapping Nature, Space and Society into a Town-green Hybrid
title_sort nature of society: enmapping nature, space and society into a town-green hybrid
publisher Linköping University Electronic Press
series Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
issn 2000-1525
publishDate 2014-10-01
description The paper describes the transformation of derelict land into a 'town-green' and the role legislation played in transforming social and natural relationships. Town-green denotes a legal status under the Great Britain Commons Act (2006) that protects certain open spaces from building development; the status requires that a space must simultaneously have a specific social quality (i.e. 'town-ness') and a specific natural quality (i.e. 'green-ness'). This hybrid condition requires an alliance between society and nature in a certain configuration (referred to here as nature2 and society2). In this empirical study it involved the participation and consensus of local residents, volunteer gardeners as well as nature itself; flowers needed to bloom and grass had to grow in order for the hybrid town-green status to be conferred. There are two distinct phases of this transformation; the first is the change in identities and configuration of the constituents of town and green. This involved the production of a modified 'real' world with: different plants and flowers; reconfigured spatial arrangements; as well as different social actors. The second phase is a shift from changes in the "real" world towards an 'enmap' - a displacement of myriad actors into documentation. This transfer from a complex messy reality into an enmap permitted the legitimation of the new network to be accepted as a 'town-green'. What the research reveals, other than hints for gardeners and community activists, is how material and non-material; social and natural; spatial, discursive and temporal worlds are hybridised.
topic Hybrid
actor-network
space
power
informal
urban
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/cu.2000.1525.146981
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