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Italian cultural geography,or the history of a prolific absence
Authors:Claudio Minca
Institution:University of Newcastle, Daish Building, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology , Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK E-mail: claudio.minca@ncl.ac.uk
Abstract:This article focuses on a group of buildings that form the site for a Steiner school in Pembrokeshire, West Wales. It examines the ways in which an environmentally friendly, ‘ecological’ structure was (and is) constructed such that the building and its accompanying practices might be seen as ‘performed art’. By more critically examining the school's geographies through ethnographic material, the paper moves away from the buildings' symbolic meanings to demonstrate how art and nature intersect in various ways, in the school's life. Art and nature were crucial to the type of education there, the physical process of building the school, and daily uses of the buildings. The paper also explores how the art-nature intersection is involved in the construction of ethical discourses and practices constitutive of ‘childhood’ and ‘education’.
Keywords:Ecological architecture  performed art  education  childhood
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