2,252 research outputs found

    ‘Praying the Keeills'. Rhythm, meaning and experience on pilgrimage journeys in the Isle of Man.

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    This paper explores the concept of ‘the travelling being’ through the lens of pilgrimage walks inthe Isle of Man in the British Isles. Focusing on pilgrimage offers a particular spiritually-inflectedperspective on the experience of travel and associated meaning-making. The pilgrimage walksstudied centre on the sites of small sixth to twelfth century chapels, known as keeills, which arescattered across the Manx landscape, and provide a focus for ecumenical reflection and celebrationof Celtic Christian heritage. Participants’ experience of two different forms of pilgrimage walks areanalysed using qualitative techniques, with reference to embodied and affective experience, mobilities,rhythm, meaning-making and belief. While all participants appreciated the experiences of walkingin the landscape, companionship, heritage expertise, and time-space for reflection, individual senseof ‘journey’ and experience, including a sense of the onward journey or what was ‘taken home’,was deeply inflected by the presence or absence of belief. Pilgrimage narratives offer insight to themeanings ascribed to and derived from the experience of spiritually inflected mobilities and rhythms,as well as the arrhythmia pilgrimage can represent relative to secular worldviews, and the arrhythmianon-believers may experience and negotiate when participating in pilgrimage walks

    Book review: By northern lights: on the making of geography in Sweden. By Anne Buttimer and Tom Mels. Basingstoke: Ashgate 2006. ISBN 0-7546-4814-1

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    283 Book reviewBy northern lights: on the making of geography in Sweden. By Anne Buttimer and Tom Mels. Basingstoke: Ashgate. 2006. 214pp. £xx cloth. ISBN: 0—7546—4814—1 cloth SAGE Publications, Inc.2008DOI: 10.1177/14744740080150020804 AvrilMaddrell Oxford Brookes University This book follows on conceptually and in subject matter from Buttimer's Geography and the human spirit (1993) and Geographers of Norden (1988) co-edited with Torsten Hagerstrand. The volume explores the making of Swedish geography, emphasizing geography as socially constructed knowledges. Although principally an analysis of the historical development of Geography in Sweden, By northern Lights draws on the interviews of the International Dialogue Project 1978–88, notably in the interview with Hagerstrand constituting Chapter Six. This interview, in the spirit of the Dialogue Project brings the (albeit still mediated) personal– professional voice of the geographer rather than their authorial or pedagogic voice to the history of geography. Buttimer brought oral history to the history of geography, long before it was fashionable, and this tradition is continued here. Many will find insight to Hagerstrand's work through this interview and it provides a useful resource in teaching the development of geographical thought – as does the whole book. The exploration of personal life-careers through biography (such as those of Edgar Kant, W. William-Olsson and Gerd Enquist) is a rich vein running throughout the text, linked in turn to wider intellectual, social and polit- ical milieu within and beyond geography. Conceptually, changes in the history of Swedish geography are explained using Buttimer's threefold conceptual frameworks of meaning, metaphor and milieu and phoenix, faust and narcissus. Although explained here, a reader unfamiliar with these ideas may find it helpful to read Buttimer's earlier work first. However, once grasped, these analytical frameworks are applied to effect in this volume in the nuanced exploration of institutional and individual accounts of geography (although the poor text quality on some of the tables mapping these different elements is unfortunate). Buttimer and Mels provide the historian of geographical ideas and practices with a rich source of contextual studies at an institutional and national 284 level, all of which combines to shed light on particular matrices of influence that produced a specifically Swedish expression of geography and Empire, home and regional studies, geog- raphy and social concern, applied geography and the separation of physical and human geog- raphy. This then provides the international reader with an opportunity to place famous Swedish developments such as the quantitative group at Lund within the broader context of Swedish geography, as well as an opportunity to learn about other geographical events and trends less well known to the Anglo-American reader at least. One novel and fascinating ele- ment is the inclusion of all Swedish doctoral dissertations 1884–2000 in Appendix A, pro- viding an accessible data set that can be analysed in many ways, not least in showing the trends in themes and methodologies in Swedish geography as well as the strong applied route for geographical knowledge. Overall, By northern Lights provides a detailed account of the history of Swedish geography, which has been long-overdue and should long stand as a reference not only on geography in Sweden but the practice of the historiography of geography

    Of Demolition and Reconstruction: a Comparative Reading of Manx Cultural Revivals

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    This paper accesses Manx cultural survival by examining the work of one of the most controversial of Manx cultural figures, Mona Douglas, alongside one of the most well loved, T.E. Brown. It uses the literature in the Isle of Man over the period 1880-1980 as a means of identifying attitudes toward two successive waves of cultural survival and revival. Through a reading of Brown\u27s Prologue to the first series of Fo\u27c\u27s\u27le Yarns, \u27Spes Altera\u27, another hope , 1896, and Douglas\u27 \u27The Tholtan\u27 – which formed part of her last collection of poetry, Island Magic, published in 1956 – the differing nationalist and revivalist roles of the two authors are revealed

    The Stasi’s Reporting on the Federal Republic of Germany

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    The Stasi’s Reporting on the Federal Republic of German

    Cooperation between the HVA and the KGB, 1951-1989

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    Cooperation between the HVA and the KGB, 1951-198
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