Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice

Languages currently used by planners to conceptualize, document, and present projects lack expansive imagination and polyphonic literacy. Planning demands new languages to address social and environmental challenges within our increasingly cross-cultural urban environments. Although storytelling the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hurford, Dianna
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3625
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-36252018-01-05T17:23:13Z Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice Hurford, Dianna Urban planning Poetry Community engagement Storytelling Architecture Languages currently used by planners to conceptualize, document, and present projects lack expansive imagination and polyphonic literacy. Planning demands new languages to address social and environmental challenges within our increasingly cross-cultural urban environments. Although storytelling theory in planning has expanded contemporary understanding of what constitutes method and practice within the discipline of planning, there has been little work to date explicating what poetry offers to planning education and practice. This thesis examines several opportunities and challenges in adopting poetry into contemporary practice in Vancouver, British Columbia using a multi-method approach. Methods include: a literature review on planning projects collaborating with artists; an ethnomethodological analysis of interviews with four Vancouver poets; a constructionist analysis of a planning text and a re/formation experiment with poetry; and finally, autoethnographic 'poetry as inquiry'. Learnings suggest that a critical approach to poetry offers an alternative language to connect to both 'self as planner' and to the multitude of overlapping voices of 'publics' in process, document, and presentation. Applied Science, Faculty of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of Graduate 2009-01-13T19:59:52Z 2009-01-13T19:59:52Z 2009 2009-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3625 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 5241663 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Urban planning
Poetry
Community engagement
Storytelling
Architecture
spellingShingle Urban planning
Poetry
Community engagement
Storytelling
Architecture
Hurford, Dianna
Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
description Languages currently used by planners to conceptualize, document, and present projects lack expansive imagination and polyphonic literacy. Planning demands new languages to address social and environmental challenges within our increasingly cross-cultural urban environments. Although storytelling theory in planning has expanded contemporary understanding of what constitutes method and practice within the discipline of planning, there has been little work to date explicating what poetry offers to planning education and practice. This thesis examines several opportunities and challenges in adopting poetry into contemporary practice in Vancouver, British Columbia using a multi-method approach. Methods include: a literature review on planning projects collaborating with artists; an ethnomethodological analysis of interviews with four Vancouver poets; a constructionist analysis of a planning text and a re/formation experiment with poetry; and finally, autoethnographic 'poetry as inquiry'. Learnings suggest that a critical approach to poetry offers an alternative language to connect to both 'self as planner' and to the multitude of overlapping voices of 'publics' in process, document, and presentation. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate
author Hurford, Dianna
author_facet Hurford, Dianna
author_sort Hurford, Dianna
title Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
title_short Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
title_full Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
title_fullStr Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
title_full_unstemmed Breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
title_sort breaking the line : integrating poetry, polyphony, & planning practice
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3625
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