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E-grāmata: Place Attachment

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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Human Behavior and Environment 12
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781468487534
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Human Behavior and Environment 12
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781468487534
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In step with the growing interest in place attachment, this volume examines the phenomena from the perspective of several disciplines-including anthropology, folklore, and psychology-and points towards promising directions of future research.

Papildus informācija

Springer Book Archives
Chapter 1 Place Attachment: A Conceptual Inquiry 1(12)
Setha M. Low
Irwin Altman
Introduction
1(1)
Background
1(2)
The Concept of Place Attachment
3(1)
Some Aspects of Place Attachment
4(4)
Place Attachment as an Integrating Concept
4(1)
Bonding and "Attachment" Features of Place Attachment
4(1)
"Place" Aspects of Place Attachment
5(1)
Social Actors and Place Attachment
6(1)
Attachment May Involve Social Relations
6(1)
Temporal Aspects of Place Attachment
7(1)
Development of Place Attachments
8(2)
Role and Purpose of Place Attachment
10(1)
Reprise
11(1)
References
12(1)
Chapter 2 Attachment To The Ordinary Landscape 13(24)
Robert B. Riley
Biology, Culture, and Individual
14(5)
The Biology of Evolution as Core of the Landscape Experience
14(1)
Attachment to the Landscape as a Cultural Phenomenon
15(3)
Individual Experience as the Basis of Landscape Attachment
18(1)
Encounter, Time, and Fantasy
19(3)
Social Encounter
19(1)
Time
20(2)
Fantasy
22(1)
Questions and Directions for Future Research
22(8)
Relation between Biological, Cultural, and Individual Frameworks
22(1)
Psychological Issues
23(1)
Are There Special Landscapes?
24(2)
Cultural Variability
26(1)
Cultural Change
26(2)
The Role of Nature and Landscape Modification
28(1)
The Changing Nature of Landscape Experience
29(1)
Insiders and Outsiders
30(1)
Cautionary Notes
30(2)
References
32(5)
Chapter 3 Attachment To Possessions 37(26)
Russell W. Belk
Attachment, Extended Self, and Possessions
38(7)
Individual Possessions
39(3)
Collective Possessions
42(3)
Toward a Theory of Attachment to Possessions
45(3)
The Singular, the Sacred, the Fetish, and the Magical
45(2)
Displaced Meaning
47(1)
Attachment to Possessions and Human Well-Being
48(6)
Materialism and Attachment
49(2)
Possessions and Identity: Some Positive Effects of Attachment
51(3)
Summary and Future Directions for Research
54(1)
References
55(8)
Chapter 4 Childhood Place Attachments 63(24)
Louise Chawla
Introduction
63(3)
Sources of Developing Attachment
66(3)
Place Attachments in Object Relations Theory
69(4)
Remembered Places
73(4)
Reported and Presented Places
77(5)
Directions for Future Research
82(2)
References
84(3)
Chapter 5 Environmental Memories 87(26)
Clare Cooper Marcus
Introduction
87(2)
Adult Memories of the Special Places of Childhood
89(9)
Reproducing Special Places of Childhood in the Adult Home
98(5)
Connie: An "English" Garden in a Faraway Land
98(1)
Priscilla: The Dwelling as a Container of Memories
99(2)
Joe: Echoes of a Missouri Childhood
101(2)
Michael and Lou: Preserving Memories of Childhood Places
103(1)
The Current Home as a Contrast to That of Childhood, or as a Replay of Unresolved Childhood Problems
103(4)
Anita: Creating a Beautiful House
104(1)
Katey: Finding Her Own Taste
105(1)
Nancy: Never Feeling at Home
105(1)
Robert: Always Leaving Home
106(1)
Aging and the Memories of Dwellings
107(2)
Future Directions for Research
109(2)
Conclusion
111(1)
References
112(1)
Chapter 6 Home As A Workplace In The Lives Of Women 113(26)
Sherry Boland Ahrentzen
Toward a Social Construction of Place Attachment
114(1)
Domestic Ideology and the Myth of the Privatized Home
115(3)
The Meaning of Work and "Women's Work"
118(2)
Women's Work and Home
119(1)
Home Workplaces in African-American Women's Experience
120(4)
Racism and African-American Women's Labor in Northern Cities
120(1)
Homework Activity in the 1910s and 1920s
121(2)
Home as Safe Haven
123(1)
Pride of Place
123(1)
Complex Bonds to Home: Homeworking Women Today
124(9)
Isolation and Entrapment
127(2)
Invasion
129(1)
Vulnerability in the Home
130(1)
Domestic (Mis)Identity
130(2)
The Material Home
132(1)
Conclusions and Future Directions
133(1)
References
134(4)
Appendix
138(1)
Chapter 7 Attachment To Place And The Representation Of The Life Course By The Elderly 139(26)
Robert L. Rubinstein
Patricia A. Parmelee
Introduction
139(1)
Three Cases
140(3)
An Integrative Model of Place Attachment in Later Life
143(5)
Life Course, Space, and Experience
145(1)
Space, Place, and Personal Identity
146(1)
Place, Self, and Others: Interdependence
147(1)
Individual Definition, Collective Definition, and Centrality of Place
148(11)
The Individual versus the Collective
148(1)
Neighborhoods
149(2)
The Home and Personal Possessions
151(2)
Personal Possessions (Objects)
153(1)
Institutions
154(5)
Conclusion and Future Directions for Research
159(1)
References
160(5)
Chapter 8 Symbolic Ties That Bind: Place Attachment In The Plaza 165(22)
Setha M. Low
Introduction
165(1)
A Cultural Definition of Place Attachment
165(1)
A Typology of Cultural Place Attachment
166(9)
Plaza Ethnography: A Case Study of Place Attachment
175(7)
Methodology
175(1)
Setting
175(3)
Place Attachment in the Parque Central
178(4)
Future Directions for Research and Design
182(2)
References
184(3)
Chapter 9 Spaces That Teach: Attachment To The African Compound 187(24)
Deborah Pellow
Introduction
187(1)
The Importance of Place
188(4)
A Sociological Approach
189(2)
The Group
191(1)
The Neighborhood of Adabraka
192(1)
The Urban Compound
193(2)
The Traditional Compound Redefined
193(2)
Adabraka's Compound Living
195(2)
The Significance of Compound Space
197(5)
Cues and Medium
198(4)
Compound Order
202(2)
Anthropology and Compound Attachment
204(1)
Of Interest to Environmental Planners
205(1)
Future Directions of Research-Design and Policy
206(2)
References
208(3)
Chapter 10 Transcendence Of Place: The Role Of La Placeta In Valencia's Las Fallas 211(20)
Denise L. Lawrence
Introduction
211(1)
Theoretical Background
212(4)
Ritual-Spatial Relations: Nonliterate Folk
213(1)
Ritual-Spatial Relations: Complex Societies
214(1)
Approach
215(1)
History of Las Fallas
216(5)
The Nineteenth Century
218(2)
The Twentieth Century
220(1)
Organizational Structure
221(5)
Artists
221(1)
Junta Central Fallera
222(1)
Neighborhood Commissions
223(3)
Ritual Transcendence
226(2)
Conclusion
228(1)
Directions for Future Research
228(1)
References
229(2)
Chapter 11 Thresholds To An Alternate Realm: Mapping The Chaseworld In New Jersey's Pine Barrens 231(22)
Mary Hufford
Theoretical Framework
231(2)
Pine Barrens Foxhunting
233(2)
Delineating the Chaseworld
235(11)
Inscriptions
237(5)
The Spatiotemporal Matrix
242(4)
Boundary Maintenance: Chaseworld Insiders and Outsiders
246(2)
Place as Kommunicative Umwelt
248(1)
Implications and Directions for Future Research
249(2)
References
251(2)
Chapter 12 Community Attachment: Local Sentiment And Sense Of Place 253(26)
David M. Hummon
Introduction
253(1)
Community Sentiment: An Interdisciplinary Review
254(8)
Community Satisfaction
254(2)
Community Attachment
256(2)
Identity, Place, and Community Sentiment
258(2)
Community Sentiment: Summary
260(2)
Community Sentiment and Sense of Place
262(12)
Rootedness and Sentiment
263(6)
Place Alienation and Sentiment
269(2)
Placelessness, Relativity, and Sentiment
271(3)
Researching Community Sentiment: New Directions
274(2)
References
276(3)
Chapter 13 Disruptions In Place Attachment 279(26)
Barbara B. Brown
Douglas D. Perkins
A Conceptual Framework
279(6)
Disruptions to Attachment via Changes in Place Processes
285(2)
Burglary as a Disruption to Processes
285(2)
Disruptions to Attachment via Changes in Places
287(9)
Voluntary Relocation
287(3)
Involuntary Relocations
290(6)
Commonalities across Disruptions
296(3)
Future Research Directions and Summary
299(2)
References
301(4)
Index 305