VIC224Y1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Berlin Wall, Henri Lefebvre, Physical Geography
Document Summary
A deep seeded human need to have a place, and a sense of identity. The human attachment to landscape: it isn"t just what we see but also a way of seeing something: it is interpreting what we see with our mind. When we are interpreting: it can we seen as a cultural construct, where your sense of place and landscape we are adding certain things to the image memory are formed. We are looking at landscape as a cultural construct and not an identity: how landscape influences our identity. In more recent history, landscape has a rich definition and w. g. hoskin"s calls it. The richest historical record we possess : a landscape changes over time and has different functions and meanings, a physical landscape can change by the interpretation of the person of. Landscape informs who we are, thus making it a cultural process the situation.