地点与领土之间:布鲁塞尔贫困地区年轻人对安全与不安全的情感地理

IF 1.9 2区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Mattias De Backer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然许多关于地方依恋的文献将其描述为(年轻人)与地方之间的情感纽带,具有积极的社会心理后果,如身份认同、扎根和归属感,但一些作者谨慎地强调,对地方的增强依恋,称为“领土性”,可能会产生负面后果,如对局外人的敌意和对其他地方的不归属感。在本文中,我想问我们应该如何理解这种差异,以及对年轻人(In)安全的情感地理的分析如何能给这个问题带来光明。本文发现,安全的情感地理有助于理解对一个地方的“积极”依恋如何导致对领土的“消极”依恋,以及一些年轻人如何在情感上依恋一个地方,而有些人则倾向于要求这些地方反对外人(也以牺牲社区其他成员为代价)。这种对家庭社区公共空间的明确占用是由区域内的安全感和区域外的不安全感共同构成的。领地性可能是对本体不安全感的反应或表达,也是对内心不安的一种表达,这种不安促使他们采取奇怪的回避和扭曲的策略来操纵空间和设置旨在保护自我的边界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Between place and territory: Young people's emotional geographies of security and insecurity in Brussels' deprived areas

While much of literature on place attachment describes it as an affective bond between a (young) person and place, with positive psychosocial consequences such as identification, rootedness and belonging, some authors are cautious and stress that an enhanced attachment to place, termed “territoriality”, may have negative consequences such as hostility towards outsiders and a sense of non-belonging elsewhere. In this paper, I ask how we should understand this difference and how the analysis of young people's emotional geographies of (in)security can bring light to this question. The paper finds that emotional geographies of (in)security are instrumental in understanding how a “positive” attachment to place may lead to a “negative” attachment to territory, how some young people emotionally attach to places and some are inclined to claim these places against outsiders (and also at the expense of other members of the community). This explicit appropriation of public spaces in the home neighbourhood is co-constituted by feeling secure inside and insecure outside the area. Territoriality may be a response to or an expression of ontological insecurity and of the inner unease that prompts them to strange avoidance and contorted strategies for manipulating spaces and setting boundaries designed to secure the self.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
45
审稿时长
45 days
期刊介绍: Emotion, Space and Society aims to provide a forum for interdisciplinary debate on theoretically informed research on the emotional intersections between people and places. These aims are broadly conceived to encourage investigations of feelings and affect in various spatial and social contexts, environments and landscapes. Questions of emotion are relevant to several different disciplines, and the editors welcome submissions from across the full spectrum of the humanities and social sciences. The journal editorial and presentational structure and style will demonstrate the richness generated by an interdisciplinary engagement with emotions and affects.
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