A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes

In this article, we explore a phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research, integral to the processes of transforming both cultural and natural heritage landscapes. Such processes are studied as active - always underway and in flux - across space and time, and through the intra-play betwe...

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Main Authors: Benjamin Richards, Per Ingvar Haukeland
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP 2020-12-01
Series:Forskning & Forandring
Subjects:
Online Access:https://forskningogforandring.dk/index.php/fof/article/view/2406/4844
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spelling doaj-badf432b78a1428fae1562f8e2ee4f8a2020-12-16T07:03:25ZdanCappelen Damm Akademisk NOASPForskning & Forandring2535-52792020-12-0132274610.23865/fof.v3.2406fof.v3.2406A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapesBenjamin RichardsPer Ingvar HaukelandIn this article, we explore a phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research, integral to the processes of transforming both cultural and natural heritage landscapes. Such processes are studied as active - always underway and in flux - across space and time, and through the intra-play between the human and more-than-human world. The authors have developed the exploration of intra-play within the fields of phenomenology and heritage studies with empirical examples of the processes of becoming, especially in experiential landscapes of post-industrial heritage sites. The article presents a phenomenology of intra-play as a haptic and ontogenetic philosophy of landscape studies, inspired by the anthropologist Tim Ingold, and a process methodology, inspired in part by the art of what Rita Irwin calls “a/r/tography”. Our approach animates the different forms, both human and non-human, that co-form heritage landscapes. The article traces these playful ways and discusses possible consequences for sustainability research and change within heritage landscapes.https://forskningogforandring.dk/index.php/fof/article/view/2406/4844more-than-humancommonsbecomingco-forminghapticheritagelandscape
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin Richards
Per Ingvar Haukeland
spellingShingle Benjamin Richards
Per Ingvar Haukeland
A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
Forskning & Forandring
more-than-human
commons
becoming
co-forming
haptic
heritage
landscape
author_facet Benjamin Richards
Per Ingvar Haukeland
author_sort Benjamin Richards
title A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
title_short A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
title_full A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
title_fullStr A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
title_full_unstemmed A phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
title_sort phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research within heritage landscapes
publisher Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP
series Forskning & Forandring
issn 2535-5279
publishDate 2020-12-01
description In this article, we explore a phenomenology of intra-play for sustainability research, integral to the processes of transforming both cultural and natural heritage landscapes. Such processes are studied as active - always underway and in flux - across space and time, and through the intra-play between the human and more-than-human world. The authors have developed the exploration of intra-play within the fields of phenomenology and heritage studies with empirical examples of the processes of becoming, especially in experiential landscapes of post-industrial heritage sites. The article presents a phenomenology of intra-play as a haptic and ontogenetic philosophy of landscape studies, inspired by the anthropologist Tim Ingold, and a process methodology, inspired in part by the art of what Rita Irwin calls “a/r/tography”. Our approach animates the different forms, both human and non-human, that co-form heritage landscapes. The article traces these playful ways and discusses possible consequences for sustainability research and change within heritage landscapes.
topic more-than-human
commons
becoming
co-forming
haptic
heritage
landscape
url https://forskningogforandring.dk/index.php/fof/article/view/2406/4844
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