2013
DOI: 10.1080/17524032.2012.749412
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Articulating Identity In and Through Maine's North Woods

Abstract: Land-use changes can interrupt relationships to place, threaten community identity, and prompt instability, altering the social and physical context and impacting the present and future state of the social-ecological system (SES). Approaches that map system changes are needed to understand the effects of natural resources decisions and human-nature interactions. In this essay, we merge theories of articulation, the event, and symbolic territory into a critical framework to analyze online newspaper article resp… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
3
0

Year Published

2014
2014
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
8
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 25 publications
1
3
0
Order By: Relevance
“…This hybrid discourse-content analysis supports the idea that the analysis of informal documents can complement other research methods and data (Hutchins and Stormer 2013) such as participant-observation, interviews, and public hearing transcripts (or resource management plans) in order to excavate place identity and the processes through which it is formed. This multiperspectival approach mixes quantitative and qualitative data (Feltham-King and Macleod 2016) but is also methodologically informed by an ethnographic sensibility (Altheide 1987, Anderson 2012, Townsend 2013, Scholl et al 2014.…”
Section: Data Collection and Analysissupporting
confidence: 62%
“…This hybrid discourse-content analysis supports the idea that the analysis of informal documents can complement other research methods and data (Hutchins and Stormer 2013) such as participant-observation, interviews, and public hearing transcripts (or resource management plans) in order to excavate place identity and the processes through which it is formed. This multiperspectival approach mixes quantitative and qualitative data (Feltham-King and Macleod 2016) but is also methodologically informed by an ethnographic sensibility (Altheide 1987, Anderson 2012, Townsend 2013, Scholl et al 2014.…”
Section: Data Collection and Analysissupporting
confidence: 62%
“…Place only becomes a symbolically charged concept when individuals perceive them as socially meaningful (Osborne 2006). The occurrence of social events within a geographic area imbues surroundings with personalized meanings and produces psychological attachments, which together form one's "sense of place" (Hutchins and Stormer 2013;Williams et al 2010). When government actions and the distributive effects of policy depend on different spatial arrangements, individuals use information related to place in order to make sense of their personal stakes, their thoughts and their justifications for their political beliefs being, "not just anywhere, [but] somewhere in particular" (Carbaugh and Cerulli 2013, 7; also see Moore 2012).…”
Section: Place As a Social Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significantly, Druschke complicates Clark's understanding of land by describing its impermanence, or how land--in the topos of watershed--changes (2013). In their essay on identity and Maine's North Woods, Hutchins and Stormer (2013) write that the impermanence of land is often revealed through conflict and disruption. Using articulation theory, Hutchins and Stormer write that land is "an element within a system of practices related to it," entangled with discourse, identity, and practices that, together, construct place and identity (2013, pp.…”
Section: Landmentioning
confidence: 99%