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Full Description
This book critically reflects on dominant landscape techniques, discusses landscapes that are marginalised through globalising market forces, and focuses on the collective nature of landscapes-from planetary climates to intimate private spaces. Whether in views from above or the mirror and mirage that landscapes can create, landscape practices too often foreground hegemony and embolden individuals with power, while simultaneously concealing the actions from which they are produced. Chapters show how landscapes are only possible through the collective contribution of humans and non-humans, interacting, sharing between, providing for, and making with. Collective Landscape Futures investigates the common, shared, and public endeavours that produce landscapes. Chapters address varied concerns across diverse geographies, from wilding practices to extractive landscapes and from decolonizing approaches to tools for co-creation. This volume will appeal to scholars and activists working in environmental humanities, landscape studies, and landscape architecture, and the many disciplines which converge around these topics, including design, geography, anthropology, philosophy, and politics.
Contents
Introduction: Being Collective 1. Landscapes of Discomfort, Or, How to Love a Coot 2. Tumbleweed Rodeo 3.The Ontopolity of Feral Landscapes: An Anthropology of Tools Negotiating Relationships between Other-Than-Human and Human Collectives 4. Reflections on a Bioblitz: Notes Toward an Ecologised Technics 5. A Proposal for a Site-Body 6. Somatic Activism: Wastelands and Bodies 7. Ground Pedagogies 8. Landscape Collective Entanglements and the Landscapes-to-Come in Aotearoa, New Zealand 9. Mapping the Jaguar Corridor: A Snapshot of Urbanisation across the Americas 10. Capital-to-Nature in Te Whanganui-a-Tara: Challenges of Collective Participation in Wellington's Town Belt 11. Redefining Collective Spaces in the Technological Axial Age 12. Ephemeral Island as Process: Sympoiesis and the Making of Collective Worlds in the Mediterranean 13. Counter-Cartography of Copper: Mapping the Collective Landscapes of Krivelj, Serbia 14. Beyond the Operational Landscape 15. A Post-Landscape Handbook