changing places

Cards (139)

  • Place
    A location which has different meanings to various people
  • Edward Relph
    • Key influence on modern day understanding of place due to his 1976 publication, 'Place and Placelessness', which aimed to 'reimagine the static and dimensional aspects of place' that were once widely accepted
  • Locale
    Locations in a place that are associated with everyday activities
  • Sense of place
    The subjective emotional attachment to a place which gives it meaning
  • Placelessness
    A place is not unique
  • Attachment
    A feeling binding one subject with another, grows stronger over time as you have more experiences in a place
  • Topophilia
    The love of a place and having a strong attachment to it
  • Topophobia
    The dislike of a place
  • Types of places
    • Near places
    • Far places
    • Experienced places
    • Media places
  • Genius loci
    The spirit of a place, suggesting that every place has a unique spirit or atmosphere
  • Place character
    • The specific qualities, attributes or features of a location that make it unique, affected by endogenous and exogenous factors
  • Endogenous factors

    • Land use
    • Topography
    • Physical geography
    • Infrastructure
    • Demographic characteristics
    • Built environment
    • Location
    • Economic characteristics
  • Exogenous factors

    • People
    • Money and investment
    • Resources
    • Ideas
  • Over time, endogenous factors will be shaped by the changing flows of exogenous factors
  • The influx of people as an exogenous factor during the 2016 Olympics will have caused the city to have become busier, leading to a short-term impact on sense of place
  • In the long-term, the investment and movements to bulldoze some areas of the Favela's will have changed the economic and social characteristics of the city. The built environment is affected by the new stadiums that were built
  • Insider
    People who feel at home within a place, with characteristics like being born there, holding citizenship, fluent in local language and conforming with social norms
  • Outsider
    The opposite of an insider, people who do not belong to the main ethnic group of a community and may feel like outsiders
  • All over the world, including the UK, there is a pattern whereby ethnic groups cluster in certain areas, potentially because people feel more comfortable around those similar to themselves
  • Unfamiliar street
    • May not be familiar to them
  • Finding particular foods
    • May find it hard to find foods they had in their country of origin
  • Architecture and vehicles
    • May look different from what they are used to
  • Feelings of unfamiliarity
    May change in the long-term
  • Insiders
    As the family get used to living in that place and integrate into society, they can feel like insiders
  • Unique sense of place
    The children of an immigrant family will have a different experience of place to their parents
  • Ethnic groups cluster in certain areas, potentially because people feel more at home surrounded by other people sharing the same ethnicity
  • Clustering of ethnic groups
    The area will adapt towards that culture over time, which may attract more people from that ethnicity to move there
  • Perspective of place may also change so that people begin to feel like outsiders, even if they initially identified as insiders to a place
  • Large influxes of immigrants into an area
    Can change the characteristics of a place
  • High street changing to cater for new cultures
    Can make the original residents begin to feel like outsiders as their surroundings become unfamiliar
  • Some people may embrace multiculturalism and the changes that occur as a result of immigration and like the diversity of their high street
  • Diversity makes some places appealing e.g. Chinatown attracts large numbers of tourists each year
  • Gentrification
    The process of renovation and improvement of housing to suit a middle class audience, usually leading to higher house prices
  • Gentrification
    Can cause insiders to feel like outsiders over time as entire districts change and adapt to suit a different audience
  • Large scale regeneration projects

    Can lead to changes in place character that cause the original population to feel like outsiders
  • The area of Stratford, previously a deindustrialised area contaminated with waste and full of derelict industrial buildings, has undergone major regeneration for the 2012 Olympic games and is now called East Village, a mixture of low cost and private housing
  • One of the traveller camp sites in Stratford was regenerated into a broadcasting booth
  • The other
    Refers to people who are unfamiliar or different to the self
  • Conflict and social tensions can exist when people who do not have the same identity (the qualities, beliefs and attachments) as other people they meet
  • When people are considered 'other' it makes it easier to be prejudiced against them as they seem 'alien' to us and can be dehumanised