A disconnected journey |
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Authors: | Geraldine Mate Celmara Pocock |
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Affiliation: | 1. Queensland Museum, South Brisbane, Australia;2. College of Arts, Society and Education, James Cook University, Townsville, Australia;3. School of Humanities, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia;4. School of Social Science (Anthropology), The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia |
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Abstract: | Driving is a dynamic human experience. The act of operating a vehicle, our movement across space and time, and the landscapes we pass afford rich sensory experiences. However, an increasingly controlled environment in the car and on roads is diminishing many sensuous encounters of orientation, sound, smell, touch, and even sight. The growing emphasis on transport infrastructure that prioritises speed, safety, comfort and convenience – dual carriageways, bypasses, ring roads, tunnels and sound barriers – is serving to disconnect us from our journeys as emplaced experiences. These changes are leading to starkly homogeneous journeys devoid of character that result in a loss of experience and place. In this paper we examine the sensory engagement and experiences of car journeys across landscapes, considering both urban and rural environments. Using case studies from different regions of Australia, we examine the bodily experiences of modern motoring. We suggest that there is no longer an immediate engagement with the landscape being traversed. With particular consideration of understanding places in an embodied way, we consider how modernised highways are disconnecting us from developing and maintaining meaning in our understanding of roads as a significant form of heritage, and as an important mechanism through which people experience heritage. |
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Keywords: | Roads place landscape sensory heritage driving |
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