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