In:Landscape in Language: Transdisciplinary perspectives
Edited by David M. Mark, Andrew G. Turk, Niclas Burenhult and David Stea
[Culture and Language Use 4] 2011
► pp. v–viii
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This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 9 June 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/clu.4.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/clu.4.toc
Table of contents
Foreword
Preface
Landscape in language: An introduction
Ethnophysiography
Exploring philosophy of place: Potential for synergy between phenomenology and ethnophysiography
Embedded in place: ‘Mirror knowledge’ and ‘simultaneous landscapes’ among Māori
Philosophical issues in ethnophysiography: Landform terms, disciplinarity, and the question of method
‘Land’ and life: Ethnoecology and ethnogeography as complementary approaches to the analyses of landscape perception
Landscape in Western Pantar, a Papuan outlier of southern Indonesia
Hawaiian storied place names: Re-placing cultural meaning
Between the trees and the tides: Inuit ways of discriminating space in a coastal and boreal landscape
Differing conceptualizations of the same landscape: The Athabaskan and Eskimo language boundary in Alaska
A case study in Ahtna Athabascan geographic knowledge
Revitalizing place names through stories and songs
Language and landscape among the Tlingit
Language, landscape and ethnoecology, reflections from northwestern Canada
Landscape embedded in language: The Navajo of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, and their named places
Navajo landscape and its contexts
Navigating regional landscapes with Jicarilla personal narrative
Ontology of landscape in language
The role of geospatial technologies for integrating landscape in language: Geographic Information Systems and the Cree of northern Quebec
Classifying landscape character
Perspectives on the ethical conduct of landscape in language research
Notes on contributors
Index
