The embodied spatialities of being in nature: encountering the nature/culture binary in green/blue space

被引:15
作者
Couper, Pauline R. [1 ]
机构
[1] York St John Univ, Geog, York, N Yorkshire, England
关键词
embodiment; green; blue space; nature; culture; phenomenology; sailing; sea; HEALTH; LANDSCAPE; EXPERIENCE; GEOGRAPHY; COAST; SELF; CARE; AUTOETHNOGRAPHY; ENVIRONMENT; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1177/1474474017732978
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The contact with nature provided by urban green and blue space is said to be beneficial for mental health, physical health, social contact and cohesion, and for learning and development among children. Yet the literature identifying these benefits fails to recognise that nature', as a category in binary relation with culture' (or humans'), is a cultural construct. Acknowledging this inevitably raises questions about exactly what contact with nature' in such spaces might consist in. Taking inspiration from more-than-representational and more-than-human geographies, this article uses Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology to interrogate encounters with nature' through small boat sailing. I argue that being on a boat entails different embodied spatialities of being from terrestrial urban life, and that this heightens a sense of nature as Other. The nature/culture binary, while a cultural idea, is materially (re)produced through the ordering of space, particularly in dense urban areas. This implies that the significance of urban green/blue space may be not only the presence of non-humans (the green/blue) but also the nature of the space in which we encounter nature. There is, then, potential for cultural geography to contribute to a much more nuanced interrogation of how people experience urban green/blue space, foregrounding the cultural conditions that shape such experience.
引用
收藏
页码:285 / 299
页数:15
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