Abstract

In recent years, there has been an upsurge in research on relational approaches in geography and in the study of cultural landscapes. Following these strands of research, the relationality of human beings with their natural environments has been highlighted, emphasising the various ways people engage with their lifeworlds. This development is motivated by the perceived need to analytically expand landscape research towards a more-than-representational point of view, challenging the still prevalent dichotomy of nature and culture. The paper takes these insights as a starting point and provides an insight into a more-than-representational understanding of coastscapes that is combined with a more-than-representational understanding of language. Its aim is threefold: to theoretically engage with a more-than-representational and enlanguaged understanding of coastscapes; to explore the relevance of mobile methods for such an approach; and to empirically illustrate the emotive and relational bonds coastal dwellers form with their littoral environs. To capture the dynamism of a more-than-representational understanding that coastal dwellers develop with their coastscape, walking interviews were conducted in the district of North Frisia (Germany). All interviews were examined following a grounded approach and refined by a linguistic in-depth investigation. The analysis revealed four prevailing interpretative repertoires reconfiguring the boundary between nature and culture. They exhibit what we call a coast-multiple that adds to coastal nature-society-mixes which might be of interest for future coastal management at the German Wadden Sea.

Highlights

  • Human beings form multifaceted relationships with the physical environments they inhabit

  • This field of research conceptually distinguishes between the entity of the land—to be understood as referring to the so-called natural and tangible features of the materiel landscape—and the notion of landscape which refers to its symbolic and/or intangible characteristics (Bender 1993). This dichotomy represents a heuristic differentiation that does not aim to draw a veil over the integrated and intertwined dimensions of land and landscape (Robertson and Richards 2003: (1) on the contrary, it refers to different theories and approaches in landscape research which emerged during the past decades (Wylie 2007; Howard et al 2019) originating from various disciplines such as geography, architecture, literary studies, anthropology, spatial planning, literary studies, ecology, art history, etc. (Vincenzotti et al 2016)

  • Coasts represent a relational livelihood (Ingold 2000: 9–12) through which individuals, communities, social groups, institutions, science and societies reproduce and experience themselves (Matless 2001: 73–95). Based on these preliminary considerations, the present paper empirically explores the coastscapes of the North Frisian Wadden Sea from a more-than-representational and relational point of view

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Summary

Introduction

Human beings form multifaceted relationships with the physical environments they inhabit.

Results
Conclusion
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