Theory of place

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One of the people who wrote about the ‘theory of place’ was Allen Pred (1936-2007). He was at the forefront of Human Geography. He wrote an important book about ‘place’ (N.D., 2007). Pred wants to reconstruct the historical becoming of places and regions as expressions of structuration processes. Therefore it is interesting to examine these regions through the analytical frame of the structurationist ‘theory of place’. The concepts place and region (important in the structurationist context) imply two social processes which they express.
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- The appropriation of space
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- Transformation of nature
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(Werlen, 2009).
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‘The historical becoming of a ‘place’ or ‘region’ by means of appropriating ‘space’ in transforming ‘nature’ is, as Pred stresses, inseparably bound to the reproduction and transformation of society in space and time’ (Werlen, 2009, p. 53). Besides it shows the uniqueness of every place and region, so people appropriate this space again.
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The theory of place comprises three main points:
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- Institutional projects
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- Examining the formation of biographies as an expression of structuration processes within a place
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- There is a meaning of place that is part of the growing consciousness of an individual
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What is interesting is that our actions are always in relation with place and time, so the theory of place is always there (Ernste, 2012). Because the theory of place pursues the contingent process that emphasizes the institutional and individual practices. Not just as a single concept, but with all their characteristics taken into account (Gregory et al, 2009).
== References ==
== References ==
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Ernste, H. (2012). Spatial Action: Classical Action Theories. Personal communication, 14 September 2012. Radboud University Nijmegen.
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Gregory, D., Johnston, R., Pratt, G., Watts, M., Whatmore, S. (2009). The dictionary of
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human geography (5th edition). United Kingdom; Wiley-Blackwell.
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N.D. (2007). Professor Pred’s Obituary. Retrieved from[http://oldweb.geog.berkeley.edu/PeopleHistory/faculty/AllanPred_InMemoriam.html] at 14 Oktober 2012.
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Werlen, B. (2009). Structurationist Geography. Elsevier.
== Contributor ==
== Contributor ==
Page published by Renate van Haaren, --[[User:RenateVanHaaren|RenateVanHaaren]] 11:07, 11 October 2012 (CEST)
Page published by Renate van Haaren, --[[User:RenateVanHaaren|RenateVanHaaren]] 11:07, 11 October 2012 (CEST)

Revision as of 09:41, 14 October 2012

THIS PAGE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION!!!!

One of the people who wrote about the ‘theory of place’ was Allen Pred (1936-2007). He was at the forefront of Human Geography. He wrote an important book about ‘place’ (N.D., 2007). Pred wants to reconstruct the historical becoming of places and regions as expressions of structuration processes. Therefore it is interesting to examine these regions through the analytical frame of the structurationist ‘theory of place’. The concepts place and region (important in the structurationist context) imply two social processes which they express.

- The appropriation of space

- Transformation of nature (Werlen, 2009).

‘The historical becoming of a ‘place’ or ‘region’ by means of appropriating ‘space’ in transforming ‘nature’ is, as Pred stresses, inseparably bound to the reproduction and transformation of society in space and time’ (Werlen, 2009, p. 53). Besides it shows the uniqueness of every place and region, so people appropriate this space again.

The theory of place comprises three main points:

- Institutional projects

- Examining the formation of biographies as an expression of structuration processes within a place

- There is a meaning of place that is part of the growing consciousness of an individual

What is interesting is that our actions are always in relation with place and time, so the theory of place is always there (Ernste, 2012). Because the theory of place pursues the contingent process that emphasizes the institutional and individual practices. Not just as a single concept, but with all their characteristics taken into account (Gregory et al, 2009).

References

Ernste, H. (2012). Spatial Action: Classical Action Theories. Personal communication, 14 September 2012. Radboud University Nijmegen.

Gregory, D., Johnston, R., Pratt, G., Watts, M., Whatmore, S. (2009). The dictionary of human geography (5th edition). United Kingdom; Wiley-Blackwell.

N.D. (2007). Professor Pred’s Obituary. Retrieved from[1] at 14 Oktober 2012.

Werlen, B. (2009). Structurationist Geography. Elsevier.

Contributor

Page published by Renate van Haaren, --RenateVanHaaren 11:07, 11 October 2012 (CEST)

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