Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Iconographical landscape warfare is one example of conflict that refers to a broad spectrum of encounters between opposing social groups who share a common reading of cultural landscapes. This 'warfare' ranges from expressions of violent force to seemingly banal everyday practices. Iconographical landscape warfare works through a dual process of denaturalising/renaturalising landscapes, where the interpretations of certain features are either erased or reinforced. I offer an overview of three examples: firstly, the case of a palimpsest in Seoul, where the dispute over a particular cultural land scape icon revealed tensions between two social groups; secondly, the deployment of symbolically antagonistic landscape objects in Hong Kong within a single social group with a unified reading of the cultural landscape; finally, a conflict surrounding an iconic landmark in Auckland. Taken together, these examples reveal the way objects can be deployed in a landscape to affect change, and how these actions are often resisted and subverted.
Iconographical landscape warfare is one example of conflict that refers to a broad spectrum of encounters between opposing social groups who share a common reading of cultural landscapes. This 'warfare' ranges from expressions of violent force to seemingly banal everyday practices. Iconographical landscape warfare works through a dual process of denaturalising/renaturalising landscapes, where the interpretations of certain features are either erased or reinforced. I offer an overview of three examples: firstly, the case of a palimpsest in Seoul, where the dispute over a particular cultural land scape icon revealed tensions between two social groups; secondly, the deployment of symbolically antagonistic landscape objects in Hong Kong within a single social group with a unified reading of the cultural landscape; finally, a conflict surrounding an iconic landmark in Auckland. Taken together, these examples reveal the way objects can be deployed in a landscape to affect change, and how these actions are often resisted and subverted.
Iconographical landscape warfare
Yoon, Hong-key (Autor:in)
Landscape Research ; 45 ; 428-443
18.05.2020
16 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
ICONOGRAPHICAL ASPECTS OF THE RENAISSANCE VILLA AND GARDEN: MOUNT PARNASSUS, PEGASUS AND THE MUSES
British Library Online Contents | 2003
|Iconographical aspects of the Renaissance villa and garden: Mount Parnassus, Pegasus and the Muses
Online Contents | 2003
|Iconographical aspects of the Renaissance villa and garden: Mount Parnassus, Pegasus and the Muses
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2003
|Elsevier | 2024
|