#humangeography
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sgcruz21-blog · 1 year ago
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professoredu · 1 year ago
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Just when you thought you were finished, your professor hits you with even more assignments. Can't they see students are human too?
Essay and Assignments Help via the Fiverr LINK ON MY BIO for all social sciences subjects.
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cinematic-landscapes · 3 years ago
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Post 1: Introduction to Cinematic Landscapes
What comes to mind first when you think of a landscape? Descriptions of what constitutes a landscape may entail questions of authenticity and ‘realness’ regarding visual representations of locations that encapsulate the natural environment or symbols of human development. Scholars of human geography (Escher 2006, Lukinbeal 2005, R. Singh & S. Singh 2019, Sommerlad 2022) explore the role of landscapes beyond the limiting understanding of them as merely backdrops or settings to some greater agent of culture, establishing instead the cultural and social activity represented and produced by such geographies. A closer look at cinematic landscapes specifically, offers a better understanding of how landscapes in film are not just consisting of place but also space, spectacle, metaphor and identity (Lukinbeal 2005, R. Singh & S. Singh 2019). This blog explores how these dynamic components of cinematic landscapes can give geographical locations a character in and of themselves in a film.
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Diagram from “Routledge Handbook of Media Geographies”, ‘Chapter 9: Film Geography’ (Sommerlad 2022, 120)
Film Geography
First, an introduction to cinematic landscapes based in the greater context of film geography is necessary. Sommerlad (2022, 119) states that “film geographical studies approach an examination of film-related contents, aspects of film productions and the (inter-)effects of film and life-world contexts”, outlining the following six research areas of the field: “(1) geography in film, (2) geography of film, (3) screen tourism, (4) cinematic cartography, (5) didactics of geography and critical film geography, (6) film as a methodological instrument and medium of communication in research” (119). Cinematic landscapes falls under the second category, geography in film, which seeks to comprehend ‘cinematic space’ through “theoretical examinations of forms of cinematographic design and questions of how an audiovisual continuity emerges, providing the spectator with a cohesive spatial impression of what is seen” (Sommerlad 2022, 120 citing Escher 2006; Clark 2008). Therefore, cinematic landscapes from a geographical perspective are evaluated for the larger cultural context they contribute to.
Landscapes As...
Lukinbeal (2005) states that “cinematic landscapes are not mere representations but are working landscapes involved with cultural production and reproduction” (17). He goes on to outline four components to cinematic landscapes: landscape as space, place, spectacle and metaphor (Lukinbeal 2005). “As space, landscape provides an area in which the drama of the film can unfold. As such, landscape is constantly turned into a space of action” (Lukinbeal 2005, 6). This idea takes landscape from the background to the foreground as an actor in the development of the story being told on screen.
“Landscape as place is closely associated with the geographic expression ‘sense of place’ and refers to the location where the narrative is supposedly set” (Lukinbeal 2005, 6). Establishment of landscape as place offers structure to the narrative and mediates interpretation through visual cues achieved by cinematography that establishes a sense of place (Lukinbeal 2005). Landscape as a spectacle refers to showing “something beautiful and visually pleasant”; it “encodes power relations within the gaze. Determination of what constitutes beauty, who is gazing and what we are gazing upon” (Lukinbeal 2005, 11). The function of place is often combined with the spectacle of landscape, as certain images of place in and of themselves can be captivating enough to entertain an audience, thus transforming place into dynamic space. Lastly, landscape as metaphor also works to evolve place into space by appropriating meaning and ideology “into landscape, the most common example of which is the attribution of human or social characteristics to landscape” (Lukinbeal 2005, 13). The way in which landscapes can be used as symbolism for human experience and emotions further develops cinematic landscapes into dynamic, cultural examples of space.
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https://www.retrocameracool.com/2019/10/06/alex-burke-take-you-on-a-trip-with-his-stunning-4x5-film-landscapes/
Landscape Identity
While Lukinbeal (2005) addresses the four factors of space, place, spectacle and metaphor of cinematic landscapes, R. Singh and S. Singh (2019) explore the element of identity. They uncover how cinematic landscapes are rife with place, space and cultural identity representation and development. “Landscapes are treasures of the past, frame contemporary everyday life, and affect future environmental, economic and cultural processes. As material custodians of both historical memory and the sense of place, landscapes encapsulate our attachments, emotions, perceptions and knowledge, as well as our interests, decisions and actions. Modern societies are marked by identity crises which, all too often, involve major landscape disruptions” (Roca et al. 2016, as cited in Singh and Singh 2019, 91). Place identity specifically derives from landscape based on the attachment one makes with the region they grew up in or spent a significant amount of their development in (Singh and Singh 2019). Spatial identity echoes similar features to Lukinbeal’s (2005) ‘landscape as metaphor’, as it explores how film can “characterize the landscape”, thus offering the appropriate space for the narrative to unfold (Singh and Singh 2019, 92). Lastly, cultural identity refers to the “values, signs, symbols, associations which is attached to a particular landscape” and thus explores how humans interact with certain landscapes (Singh and Singh 2019, 42). These cultural components to landscape can be implied and signified upon in cinema to further develop a narrative using visual cues (Singh and Singh 2019).
The aforementioned theories contextualizing cinematic landscapes in the greater context of film geography will be explored further in the following posts of this blog. Deeper analysis of these dynamic components to cinematic landscapes has led me to wonder if geographical locations can take on the role of a character in a cinematic narrative much like a human actor does.
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bocher-daniel · 4 years ago
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What can social media tell us about screen tourism?
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What is left to discover after a century of intensive study in the field of film tourism? Today’s technologies can give us a new look into a previously hidden side of film tourism. For example, as film tourists casually use social media, one can gain intimate insights into emotions, behaviors on site and their perception of the destination image.
A city becomes a fantasy playground
With the use of CrowdTangle and webscraping methods, I collected over 1100 examples of film tourism communication from Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. The communication of film tourists in the case study "Game of Thrones", one can see that they regard the city of Dubrovnik as the fictional capital King’s Landing. They place fictional geotags from the series narrative within the real city. The film locations within the old town of Dubrovnik emanate a sense of fantasy that extends over the whole city, so the whole downtown becomes a playground for film tourists.
Looking at the post tourist through the window of social media
I argue that the film tourist is part of a bigger pattern that is evolving around postmodern theories and the post-truth realities of the globalized world. The film tourist is a post-tourist who enjoys blurring the lines between reality and fiction. This behavior is a problem when narratives become more important than facts, and our societies become divided, without a shared sense of space and reality. Social media is part of this: as a symptom, catalyst but also at the same time a window into the development of film tourism and our understanding of space.
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micheleappel · 2 years ago
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To the history within us all, but especially, Ruth 🐂🏙🌳, and that badass ol’ monument of a car that never moves - may it, and all the spirits of our past have their haunting pleasure. Resist at your peril #givein #dallastx #cedarsdallas #humangeography #trammellcrow #cityscapes #streetphotography https://www.instagram.com/p/CidNeHopfmY/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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The shrine atop #Phusi in #luangphrabang #laos makes a perfect frame within a frame. I just happened to be shooting the view when this young #monk came along - photographer’s luck! #travel #travelphotography #instapicture #instapic #buddhism #photographer #asia #framed #architecture #landscapephotography #humangeography (at Luang Phrabang, Louangphabang, Laos)
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poetwritologist · 7 years ago
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You think I don't love you any more. This is not true. I just don't love you the way you wish to be loved. I love you extremely and promise you that I will give you new #defination . Now people will recognize you from my point of view. I love the covered side of yours. You are the most amazing world i have ever explored. I will love you always. #geography #loveyougeography #geographyforlife #humangeography ❤️❤️
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history-monster · 5 years ago
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The British Academy have launched an initiative to encourage the arts and humanities disciplines and promote their benefits to society modelled on the hugely successful STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) initiative. . . The Academy says “The extraordinary times we’re all currently living through show us just how crucial SHAPE subjects are in keeping life running, care going, communities together, the economy working, the environment sustainable and people’s spirits lifted.” (Quote taken from the SHAPE website). . . I love this idea, just not sure about the name though. Maybe it will grow on me. Let’s share this and spread the word! #britishacademy #shape #arts #socialsciences #humanities #creative #music #drama #theatre #humangeography #stem #initiative #covid19 #museum https://www.instagram.com/p/CButZdiHa-G/?igshid=lbwxrxs9ydeo
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driftlessworld · 5 years ago
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Walk this way #newdirection #coronadays #beherenow #paradigmshifted #greatawakening #topographics #humangeography #document #float #aperture #photomidwest https://www.instagram.com/p/CBtR5KeJzba/?igshid=9ax7zvnj6yc2
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Today my teacher confessed to me that she remembers my name because of my handwriting 😂📝 and I know I haven’t been active lately (most of the posts are coming from Liz), so here are my AP Human Geography Notes!
• Sasha •
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hellsbellsellesbelles · 7 years ago
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Trying to con yourself in to getting sleepy by colouring doesn't work when it's a topic that you're super interested in #humangeography #ellelikesmaps #colouryourselfsmart
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cinematic-landscapes · 3 years ago
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Post 2: Personality of Place
When we think of characters in a film we often think of the living actors portrayed on screen who play a scripted role in the narrative. Characteristics are defined as “a feature or quality belonging typically to a person, place, or thing and serving to identify them” (Oxford University Press 2022). If a place can have characteristics then it ought to also be considered a character in films. Certain developments in the cinematic world confirm this notion such as the well known global curated film streaming platform, production company and film distributor, MUBI, having an entire selection of 102 films categorized under the heading, ‘Landscape as Character’, where the “landscape/environment plays a central role” (MUBI 2022). A closer look at the way in which film geography scholars discuss cinematic landscapes also speak to a strongly emerging theme of places having their own personality on the screen, echoing many of the themes outlined in the previous post. 
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Screenshot of ‘Landscape as Character’ movie list on MUBI (https://mubi.com/lists/landscape-as-character)
Landscape as an Actor 
The first way in which landscape acts as a character is in its function as an agent of story development. “​​Location is a character, not just a backdrop for the characters. The environment makes the story possible” (Prichard 2006, 1). Prichard (2006) discusses how there are entire genres of film that are landscape-driven, such as the American Western. This notion echoes Lukinbeal’s (2005) concept of landscape as space. “As space, landscape provides an area in which the drama of the film can unfold. As such, landscape is constantly turned into a space of action. Put another way, social space de-centers the importance of locational place allowing narratives to unfold'' (Lukinbeal 2005, 6). Characters in a film function as actors of change and development. Perhaps that is why the profession is called acting. If action is what constitutes a character, then landscape exhibiting properties of action gives it similar properties to human characters (Sharman 2020). “Landscape as place becomes a central component of the narrative in that it acts upon social space” (Lukinbeal 2005, 7).
Landscape as Metaphor
With landscape established as an agent of narration development, another way in which it acts as a character is by functioning as a vehicle of emotion, echoing Lukinbeal’s (2005) landscape as metaphor. “Small metaphors are rhetoric devices or literary tropes, for instance, a character is sad and it begins to rain” (Lukinbeal 2005, 13); or further “various physiographic features of earth is used for expressing human emotion such as green vegetation, snowy mountains and hills for romance, rain for sadness, love and sometimes to depict joyous atmosphere, rugged topography of desert to depict loneliness, breakups etc. (Singh and Singh 2019, 93). Filmmakers use landscape as metaphor to evoke emotion in much the same way they use plot or character development to achieve an emotive response. These landscape metaphors work as cues that “invented communities evolve with regard to cinematically transported symbols that are to be read and felt in a certain way and which are used to show us how we are supposed to feel, think and react” (Escher 2006, 310). A key component to this role of landscape in emotive response is the way in which it can evolve and develop throughout the narrative. Prichard (2006) describes the landscape of his own film, Where it Once Was: “The Delta, like many imagine it, is first presented as a harmless, if not charming, location, arid, yet quaint. It develops into something a bit more sinister as the film progresses'' (8). Landscape can evoke the process of character development much in the same way that a human character might (Sharman 2020). 
Spatial Identity 
The emotional function of landscape as metaphor also touches on R. Singh and S. Singh’s (2019) notion of spatial identity. The metaphors and symbols of landscape can evoke or confirm a sense of development either for the actors on screen or the viewers. “Each piece of land that the characters inhabit directly and intentionally reflect their demeanor and motives. One could draw the conclusion that they are merely extensions of the land” (Prichard 2006, 14). This idea implies that the landscape not only reflects but becomes a part of the character's identity. It is through this relationship between the protagonist and their environment that a sense of identity for both the person and the place is revealed (Prichard 2006). Prichard (2006) even speaks to the inverse of this relationship by suggesting “that artists in similar environments might produce art that would invoke similar feelings”, implying that landscapes influence the identity of an artist and their potential portrayal of that landscape in their art (Prichard 2006, 4). 
Landscape as Spectacle 
Lastly, beyond being an agent of emotions and action, landscape can function specifically as a main character due to its spectacular nature. Landscape as spectacle is developed through cinematography. Certain camera angles or tactics such as establishing shots and panning paired with choice editing of such footage can give landscape the main stage by captivating the attention of the viewer (Lukinbeal 2005). “For instance, both landscape and cinema are defined through the act of viewing and therefore all cinematic landscapes at some level function as spectacles” (Lukinbeal 2005, 15). This function can give landscape the limelight over other characters such as the case with Where it Once Was, as “the human characters are secondary to the landscape. The story development comes in terms of the landscape and not the characters”; “the film strives to use the landscape and camera as characters of their own” (Prichard 2006, 8-9). Making landscapes the main character of a film is a cinematic device that has existed for quite some time. Take well known director of American Westerns, John Ford, for example. “Ford used the landscape as a dramatic device for thrusting his Westerns into the realm of legend. ‘I think you can say that the real star of my Westerns has always been the land,’ he said” (Ford 1997, 102 cited in Prichard 2006, 10). As Prichard (2006) puts it in regard to his film: “Ultimately the landscapes take on a presence of their own and transcend from “set” to “lead”; “place” into “character” (19). After researching how filmmakers achieve this transformation of landscape from set to character, I wondered if I could achieve the same. 
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bocher-daniel · 5 years ago
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Die Welt als Panorama
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Heute gibt es sichere Fortbewegungsmittel die farplanmäßig rieseige Strecken überwinden. Länder, Kontinente und alle sieben Weltmeere kann man in immer kürzerer und kalkulierbarer Zeit bereisen. Die Nachrichtenkommunikation aus allen Ecken des Globus funktioniert in nahezu Echtzeit und das Internet gibt uns einen Rückkanal den wir mittels Handys ubiquitär nutzen können. Mit der Dampf getriebenen Eisenbahn und der Telegraphie begann diese Beschleunigung des ökonomischen und sozialen Fortschrits gegen mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts und führte zu einem “neuen, gleitenden Blick auf die Welt als Panorama”.
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Die Vielfalt der Welt ist gerade erreichbar geworden, da wird die Wahrnehmung bereits wieder eingetrübt. In den Reisemitteln der Moderne zieht die Unterschiedlichkeit der Welt an uns vorbei oder, was das selbe ist: “Unser Blick gleitet an ihnen entlang”. Dieser Blick hat eine Dimension verloren: Er fokusiert die Ferne, der Nahbereich bleibt unscharf, Details verschwinden, flächige Visualisierungen geraten ins Sichtfeld.
Der Verlust der Tiefe ist jedoch gerade als Beruhigung und Normalisierung der Natur zu verstehen, die notwendig geworden ist nachdem die rationale Beherschung der Welt gewachsen ist. Es schaft Vertrauen in einer modernen Welt, die in sich selbst aber meist nicht sichrbar trotz allem Gefahren birgt wie: Unglücke, Katastrophen, Krisen und Revolutionen.
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Die Natur scheint beherschbar gemacht in dem wir sie mit unseren modernen Transportmitteln ohne große mühe als Faktor vernachlässigen können. Die Tiefe der Wahrnehmung nimmt ab und somit auch die wahrgenommene Gefahr. Existentielle Lebensunsicherheiten und Abenteuer sind nicht mehr Teil des Alltäglichen und werden aus den Erfahrungen der Menschen heraus geschnitten. Selbst das Reisen als letzte Instanz ist nun kein Abenteuer mehr: “Die Vervollkommnung des Eisenbahnnetzes der Erde nahm dem Reisen, zumindest was seine Methode betraf, also schließlich den Stachel des Abenteuerlichen.” Wer reist, rechnet nicht mehr mit dem Tod, es bleiben höchstens noch diffuse Ängste, Unfälle und einem Systemversagen sowie dem Rückfall in Abenteuerliche Zeiten. Rucksacktourismus ist auch nicht mehr das was es im 18 Jahrhundert war!
Das Panorama ist somit mehr als nur das dominante visuelle Massenmedium des 19. Jahrhunderts, denn es beeinflusst auch andere Lebensbereiche und unser Wahrnehmung der Welt. Es bringt die Entwicklungen auf einen einheitlichen Begriff. Die Eisenbahn und die Telegraphie, mit der daurch angestoßenen Beschleunigung von Menschen, Handel und Kommunikation formiert ein neues Weltpanorama, das sich bis heute expotentiell entwickelt. Die Welt ist heute ein Panorama, sei es mit Blick aus dem Flugzeug oder durch die Feeds auf Instagram.
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Bilder
[1] Photo by Dwayne Hills on Unsplash 
[2] Photo by Valentin Wallet on Unsplash 
[3] Photo by Leo Roomets on Unsplash 
[4] Photo by Raphael Andres on Unsplash
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geoafrikana · 5 years ago
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"If you don’t do things with people, they assume you are doing things to them." Hence the need for inclusive public engagement in town planning. #urp #urbanplanning #townplanning #regionalplanning #urbanandregional planning #society #urbanrenewal #gentrification #humangeography https://www.instagram.com/p/B27P70_Bc7V/?igshid=1bobvsvlgkt9g
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resourcehunts-blog · 6 years ago
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The Dictionary of Human Geography get book in our store #resourcehunts #bookstagram #books #bookshelf #bookstagrammer #book #bookworm #bookclub #followforfollowback #follow4follow #follow #share #tamil #trendy #trending #trend #trendingnow #humangeography #geography https://www.instagram.com/resourcehunts/p/BxDGB3yhtTp/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1xg6zusy59hh9
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asgeog2260 · 4 years ago
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My Personal Journey In Geography.
Hello everyone! My name is Antonio, I am currently entering my fourth year in the Geography program. I have lived in Guelph for the past few years now, but I am originally from Burlington. There are countless positive aspects that living in Guelph has to offer, especially from a geographer’s perspective. The city clearly prioritizes environmental conservation to an extent that is unlike any other in our surrounding area. These practices have led for the city vibes to link closely with nature and the outdoors, which I feel is very refreshing. It was because of those reasons that I had decided to come to the University in the first place (even before I had decided on my major). I have several goals for the future that have led me to this program, mainly the fact that this degree is the first step towards becoming an Urban Planner. I am also very interested in building and design, which is why I would also like to start a business flipping cottages as well.
As for the main focus of this weeks Blog Post, I believe that the abundance of information that we read in the media on a daily basis is not a truly reliable source. I personally feel more comfortable relying on Scholarly Sources to ensure that I am being fed dependable information; but to be honest I rarely go out of my way to fact check the stories I have been exposed to. Which leads me to express that my main source of geographical information and other news does come from social media (especially Instagram). While I'm sure everyone reading this is well aware of the bias in the media, it is certainly the most accessible source of news (especially for our generation). Therefore, I would say three main sources that I oftentimes view include News Channels (CNN), Government Websites, and Social Media. 
Considering that the Geography department may not be the most popular university program out there, I am very interested in learning about the future aspirations of other students. Any other Geo majors here? What are your plans for after graduation? 
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