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Uncanny landscapes (JOURNAL SPECIAL ISSUE)

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posted on 2023-06-07, 07:51 authored by Jon P Mitchell, Karis Jade PettyKaris Jade Petty
1. (no abstract for Intro) 2. This article examines experiences of the uncanny within woodlands of Southern England among walkers who have impaired vision. It proposes that uncanny experiences disrupt assumptions that humans actively perceive a passive landscape by approaching the landscape as an actant provoking uncanny experiences that shift senses of self–landscape relations. Optical tropes have pervaded notions of both the uncanny and conceptualizations of self–landscape relations in contemporary European intellectual thought. Here, attention to the case study of blindness reconfigures these understandings and reveals the slippery nexus of the visible and the invisible in uncanny experiences. Motifs of vision are refracted in the experiences of “phantom vision” through which people who have noncongenitally impaired vision might “see” in their “mind’s eye.” The palpable, felt, multisensorial senses of the uncanny are revealed with the presences of trees and visceral nature of darkness. Uncanny landscapes are characterized by presences, the unknown, and disjunctures, in which notions of familiarity and strangeness, known and unknown, collide.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Accepted version

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Issue

4

Volume

16

ISBN

0000000000

Series

Material Religion

Department affiliated with

  • Anthropology Publications

Notes

his is an edited book edited by Jon P Mitchell, Karis Petty

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Editors

Jon P Mitchell, Karis Petty

Legacy Posted Date

2021-01-12

First Open Access (FOA) Date

2022-03-03

First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date

2021-01-12

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