Abstract

Germany has assumed a leading position in the global wind energy market, with its coastal districts of North Frisia and Dithmarschen as two outstanding locations. These coastal landscapes are the outcome of interaction between human and non-human forces throughout the centuries, and they are characterized by the wind, the tides and the sea as well as the building of dikes, technological innovations and the interplay of regional, national and trans-national forces. Against this background, the short but complex transition from a mainly agricultural landscape into a wind energy landscape is interpreted here following Latour's (2005b) concept of a Dingpolitik (politics of things) and complementary assumptions suggested by the European Landscape Convention. I will argue that the rise of wind energy in Northern Germany is not only the result of top-down governance strategies, but of a collective effort based on the dynamics of the collective of people and things that make up these landscapes. Based on ethnographic examples, this article analyses the emergence of wind energy landscapes in Northern Germany from the first implementation of wind turbines to civic wind parks as a form of social practice.

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