“Closing the Landscape”: Beyond the Phenomenon, a Brief History of the Social Construct
Le Floch, Sophie
“Closing the Landscape”: Beyond the Phenomenon, a Brief History of the Social Construct - 2005.
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The expression closed landscape refers both to a physical phenomenon (the spatial extension of forest) and the way it is perceived by users of the spaces concerned (feeling of oppression, etc.). It is also the product of a social construct. This construct emerged with concerns over the environment in the 1970s and reached its height in the 1980s during a conflict where the meanings of the changes affecting rural spaces were renegotiated. It then became a standard for the evaluation and evolution of these spaces, leading to a regional development paradigm of openness. This paradigm is theoretically complementary, not antagonistic, to that of promotion the reintroduction of trees into farming systems.
“Closing the Landscape”: Beyond the Phenomenon, a Brief History of the Social Construct - 2005.
27
The expression closed landscape refers both to a physical phenomenon (the spatial extension of forest) and the way it is perceived by users of the spaces concerned (feeling of oppression, etc.). It is also the product of a social construct. This construct emerged with concerns over the environment in the 1970s and reached its height in the 1980s during a conflict where the meanings of the changes affecting rural spaces were renegotiated. It then became a standard for the evaluation and evolution of these spaces, leading to a regional development paradigm of openness. This paradigm is theoretically complementary, not antagonistic, to that of promotion the reintroduction of trees into farming systems.
Réseaux sociaux