The body in the landscape

Western Landscape is more than a description of Nature, it is a field on which discourses of perspective, aesthetics, and political philosophy intersect to describe the subject's relationship to Nature and civil society. Defined as such by the homogenous space of linear perspective, Landscape i...

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Main Author: Shinkle, Eugénie
Format: Others
Published: 1997
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/346/1/MQ40232.pdf
Shinkle, Eugénie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Shinkle=3AEuge==0301nie=3A=3A.html> (1997) The body in the landscape. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.3462013-10-22T03:40:19Z The body in the landscape Shinkle, Eugénie Western Landscape is more than a description of Nature, it is a field on which discourses of perspective, aesthetics, and political philosophy intersect to describe the subject's relationship to Nature and civil society. Defined as such by the homogenous space of linear perspective, Landscape is not a 'real', but a virtual space, which functions hegemonically to conceal the material body and to legislate subjective agency. Classical representational space imposes limits upon visible, material Nature by confining the spectator to a unique viewing position; the park or garden delimits an ideal subject of government by presenting a politically expedient vision of Nature. Landscape--both the image, and the real spaces which pattern themselves after it--demands to be read as a text, locating the subject as/at a 'point of view' which is removed from real space and time. Perpetuated by historical and present-day discourses of landscape representation and alteration, as well as the discourse of art history, Classical or perspectival vision characterizes not only the subject's relationship to real Nature, but to knowledge and history as well. Positing subjective agency in/as corporeal choice is a possible means of critiquing perspectival vision and its role in traditional art historical practice. Deconstructing the 'point of view' implies a different way of situating oneself as a subject; as well, it suggests the collapse of the narrative history of Landscape. Finally, it raises the question that the real itself is produced out of a desire for the other. 1997 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/346/1/MQ40232.pdf Shinkle, Eugénie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Shinkle=3AEuge==0301nie=3A=3A.html> (1997) The body in the landscape. Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/346/
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description Western Landscape is more than a description of Nature, it is a field on which discourses of perspective, aesthetics, and political philosophy intersect to describe the subject's relationship to Nature and civil society. Defined as such by the homogenous space of linear perspective, Landscape is not a 'real', but a virtual space, which functions hegemonically to conceal the material body and to legislate subjective agency. Classical representational space imposes limits upon visible, material Nature by confining the spectator to a unique viewing position; the park or garden delimits an ideal subject of government by presenting a politically expedient vision of Nature. Landscape--both the image, and the real spaces which pattern themselves after it--demands to be read as a text, locating the subject as/at a 'point of view' which is removed from real space and time. Perpetuated by historical and present-day discourses of landscape representation and alteration, as well as the discourse of art history, Classical or perspectival vision characterizes not only the subject's relationship to real Nature, but to knowledge and history as well. Positing subjective agency in/as corporeal choice is a possible means of critiquing perspectival vision and its role in traditional art historical practice. Deconstructing the 'point of view' implies a different way of situating oneself as a subject; as well, it suggests the collapse of the narrative history of Landscape. Finally, it raises the question that the real itself is produced out of a desire for the other.
author Shinkle, Eugénie
spellingShingle Shinkle, Eugénie
The body in the landscape
author_facet Shinkle, Eugénie
author_sort Shinkle, Eugénie
title The body in the landscape
title_short The body in the landscape
title_full The body in the landscape
title_fullStr The body in the landscape
title_full_unstemmed The body in the landscape
title_sort body in the landscape
publishDate 1997
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/346/1/MQ40232.pdf
Shinkle, Eugénie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Shinkle=3AEuge==0301nie=3A=3A.html> (1997) The body in the landscape. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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