Spectral Geographies: unsettling place and self

Lead Research Organisation: University of Sheffield
Department Name: Geography

Abstract

This research will explore how senses of place, and of self, are constituted, performed and unsettled via processes of haunting. Aiming to advance and exemplify creative and imaginative work in current geographical thought and practice, it will inquire as to how theoretically-rich notions of haunting might produce new understandings of how places and selves intertwine, and it will examine the spectral geographies of four differing mediums: a) material objects, b) lived bodies, c) imaginative texts and d) visual images. Particular emphasis will be placed upon manifestations of the spectral, for instance in senses of unease, uncanniness, watching, dislocation and doubling.

Publications

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Anderson, Ben; Harrison, Paul (2010) Taking-place: Non-representational Theories and Geography

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JOHN WYLIE (Author) Hiding Places

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Wylie J (2009) Landscape, absence and the geographies of love in Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers

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Wylie J (2016) The spectral geographies of W.G. Sebald in cultural geographies