Appalachian Hikers’ Digital Journals

IF 0.4 Q1 HISTORY
David McLaughlin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Appalachian Trail—a hiking trail in the eastern United States—is for many an icon of the American wilderness experience. It is an unruly landscape, one which is yearly being re-made, re-marked, and “reclaimed” to wilderness. Within its corridor of trees, the Appalachian Trail hides decaying farms bought by forced purchase, ghosts of old cemeteries, and many different paths through the trees. There is a palpable sense of possibility, of constant change, and of what could have been. In this article, drawing on recent research in cultural geography which emphasizes the unsettled and unsettling nature of landscape, I will introduce the potential for new, digital literary-spatial forms made on the Appalachian Trail to write and to enact this unruly landscape.
阿巴拉契亚徒步旅行者的数字期刊
阿巴拉契亚小径是美国东部的一条徒步小径,对许多人来说,它是美国荒野体验的象征。这是一个难以驾驭的景观,每年都在被重新制作,重新标记,并“开垦”到荒野。在阿巴拉契亚山径的树木走廊里,隐藏着被迫购买的衰败农场,古老墓地的幽灵,以及许多穿过树木的不同路径。有一种明显的可能性,不断变化的感觉,以及本来可以有的感觉。在这篇文章中,我将借鉴最近强调景观不稳定和令人不安的本质的文化地理学研究,介绍在阿巴拉契亚小径上创作的新的数字文学空间形式的潜力,以书写和制定这一难以驾驭的景观。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
33.30%
发文量
0
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