Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Yi-Fu Tuan (Chinese: 段義孚; December 5, 1930 – August 10, 2022) was a Chinese-born American geographer and writer. He was one of the key figures in human geography and an important originator of humanistic geography .
A Place in Space. Counterpoint. ISBN 1-887178-27-9; Soja, Edward W. 1996. Thirdspace: Journeys to Los Angeles and Other Real-And-Imagined Places. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 1-55786-675-9; Tuan, Yi Fu. 1977. Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-3877-2; Tuan, Yi Fu. 1990.
Yi-Fu Tuan employed the term for the feeling-link between person and place as part of his development of a humanistic geography. [3] James W. Gibson, in his book A Reenchanted World (2009) also argues that topophilia or "love of place" is a biologically based, close cultural connection to place. Gibson says that such connections mostly have ...
Place and Space: The Perspective of Experience, by Yi-Fu Tuan (1977) Placemaking: The Art and Practice of Building Communities] by Lynda H. Schneekloth & Robert G. Shibley (1995) The Great Good Place, by Ray Oldenburg (1989) The Ecology of Place, by Timothy Beatley and Kristy Manning (1997) How to Turn a Place Around, by Project for Public ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Place attachment is the emotional bond between person and place, [1] ... Yi-Fu Tuan, a noteworthy human ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... – scholar in the space and places of globalization ... – human geographer and inventor of Central place theory. Yi-Fu Tuan ...
The volume takes as a point of departure Yi-Fu Tuan's ideas of space as freedom and danger versus place as safety, and how this opposition plays out in Cervantes' fiction. Starting around 2008 De Armas became increasingly interested in the cultural and literary productions of the maternal side of his family, publishing essays on Ana Galdós ...
In physical geography, a place includes all of the physical phenomena that occur in space, including the lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. [13] Places do not exist in a vacuum and instead have complex spatial relationships with each other, and place is concerned how a location is situated in relation to all other locations.