Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Geography === Kevin Blake === With their windswept ridges and wind-rent skies, prairies and plains have often been denigrated as nothing but nothing—empty, meaningless, valueless space. Mountains and forests, oceans and deserts have been praised and protected w...

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Main Author: Olstad, Tyra A.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13520
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-135202017-03-04T03:51:13Z Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self Olstad, Tyra A. Sense of place Landscape perception National park service Environmental history -- Great Plains Nature writing Prairie Aesthetics (0650) Environmental Studies (0477) Geography (0366) Doctor of Philosophy Department of Geography Kevin Blake With their windswept ridges and wind-rent skies, prairies and plains have often been denigrated as nothing but nothing—empty, meaningless, valueless space. Mountains and forests, oceans and deserts have been praised and protected while vast expanses of undulating grasslands have been plowed under, grazed over, used, abused, maligned. Once the largest ecosystem on the North American continent, wild prairies now persist mainly in overlooked or unwanted fragments. In part, it’s a matter of psychology; some people see plains as visually unpleasing (too big, too boring) or physically alienating (too dry, too exposed). It’s also part economics; prairies seem more productive, more valuable as anything but tangles of grass and sage. But at heart, it’s a matter of sociocultural and individual biases; people seeking bucolic or sublime landscapes find “empty,” treeless skyscapes flat and dull, forgettable. Scientific, social, and especially aesthetic appreciation for plains requires a different perspective—a pause in place—an exploration of the horizon as well as an examination of the minutiae, few people have strived to understand and appreciate undifferentiated, untrammeled space. This research seeks to change that by example, using conscientious, systematic reflection on first-hand experience to explore questions fundamental to phenomenology and geography—how do people experience the world? How do we shape places and how do places shape us?—in the context of plains landscapes. Written and illustrated from the perspective of a newcomer, a scholar, a National Park Service ranger, a walker, a watcher, a person wholly and unabashedly in love with wild places, the creative non-fiction narratives, photoessays, and hand-drawn maps address themes of landscape aesthetics, sense of place, and place-identity by tracing the natural, cultural, and managerial histories of and personal relationships with Arizona’s Petrified Forest National Park, South Dakota’s Badlands National Park, Kansas’s Konza Prairie Long-Term Ecological Research Station, and Wyoming’s Fossil Butte National Monument. Prosaic and photographic meditations on wildness and wilderness, travel and tourism, preservation and conservation, days and seasons, expectations and acceptance, even dreams and reality intertwine to evoke and illuminate the inspiring aesthetic of spacious places—Zen of the plains. 2012-03-06T18:08:23Z 2012-03-06T18:08:23Z 2012-03-06 2012 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13520 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Sense of place
Landscape perception
National park service
Environmental history -- Great Plains
Nature writing
Prairie
Aesthetics (0650)
Environmental Studies (0477)
Geography (0366)
spellingShingle Sense of place
Landscape perception
National park service
Environmental history -- Great Plains
Nature writing
Prairie
Aesthetics (0650)
Environmental Studies (0477)
Geography (0366)
Olstad, Tyra A.
Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Geography === Kevin Blake === With their windswept ridges and wind-rent skies, prairies and plains have often been denigrated as nothing but nothing—empty, meaningless, valueless space. Mountains and forests, oceans and deserts have been praised and protected while vast expanses of undulating grasslands have been plowed under, grazed over, used, abused, maligned. Once the largest ecosystem on the North American continent, wild prairies now persist mainly in overlooked or unwanted fragments. In part, it’s a matter of psychology; some people see plains as visually unpleasing (too big, too boring) or physically alienating (too dry, too exposed). It’s also part economics; prairies seem more productive, more valuable as anything but tangles of grass and sage. But at heart, it’s a matter of sociocultural and individual biases; people seeking bucolic or sublime landscapes find “empty,” treeless skyscapes flat and dull, forgettable. Scientific, social, and especially aesthetic appreciation for plains requires a different perspective—a pause in place—an exploration of the horizon as well as an examination of the minutiae, few people have strived to understand and appreciate undifferentiated, untrammeled space. This research seeks to change that by example, using conscientious, systematic reflection on first-hand experience to explore questions fundamental to phenomenology and geography—how do people experience the world? How do we shape places and how do places shape us?—in the context of plains landscapes. Written and illustrated from the perspective of a newcomer, a scholar, a National Park Service ranger, a walker, a watcher, a person wholly and unabashedly in love with wild places, the creative non-fiction narratives, photoessays, and hand-drawn maps address themes of landscape aesthetics, sense of place, and place-identity by tracing the natural, cultural, and managerial histories of and personal relationships with Arizona’s Petrified Forest National Park, South Dakota’s Badlands National Park, Kansas’s Konza Prairie Long-Term Ecological Research Station, and Wyoming’s Fossil Butte National Monument. Prosaic and photographic meditations on wildness and wilderness, travel and tourism, preservation and conservation, days and seasons, expectations and acceptance, even dreams and reality intertwine to evoke and illuminate the inspiring aesthetic of spacious places—Zen of the plains.
author Olstad, Tyra A.
author_facet Olstad, Tyra A.
author_sort Olstad, Tyra A.
title Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
title_short Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
title_full Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
title_fullStr Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
title_full_unstemmed Zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
title_sort zen of the plains: discovering space, place and self
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13520
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