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X-WR-CALNAME:Changing Landscapes, Changing Lives
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Changing Landscapes, Changing Lives
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DTSTART:20210328T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210330T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210330T170000
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CREATED:20210401T101210Z
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UID:454-1617102000-1617123600@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Whose Landscapes?
DESCRIPTION:Second symposium – Whose Landscapes? 30/3/21\nOne of the major advantages of a biographical/narrative approach is the potential it offers to open up our understanding of landscape to a wider range of voices. A particular focus of concern in the UK context is the ways in which landscapes\, especially rural landscapes\, can be constructed as ‘white spaces’ that exclude ethnic minorities (Neal and Agyeman\, 2006)\, an issue recently highlighted by MK Gallery’s ‘The Lie of the Land’ exhibition and Beth Collier’s ‘Wild in the City’ initiative. Class exclusion is a major and enduring structural feature of\, especially\, rural English landscapes\, as the National Trust’s ‘People’s Landscapes’ initiative recognizes. \nClick on the links below\, download and open the file to view presentations from this symposium. These presentations have been posted with kind permission from the speakers.\nThe disruptive politics of Brexit: rural communities\, dependency and migration \nProfessor Sarah Neal\, University of Sheffield \nAnti-blackness and the racialization of the British rural countryside space – how racial prejudice and place are intertwined yet contested \nMaxwell Ayamba\, Sheffield Environmental Movement \n‘White and pleasant land?’ Racism and exclusion in the English countryside\, 1948 – 2020 \nLottie Jacob\, University of Reading \nProgression\, extension\, development\, and the origins of The MERL \nDr Ollie Douglas\, The Museum of English Rural Life \nGreen Unpleasant Land: English Rurality and Empire \nProfessor Corinne Fowler\, University of Leicester \nThe problem with the preservationists: conflicts of class and amenity in the ‘industrial Pennines’ \nDr Katrina Navickas\, University of Hertfordshire \nFootpaths\, heritage\, and limitations on popular access to land \nProfessor Paul Readman\, King’s College\, London
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/changing-landscapes/event/whose-landscapes/
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