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Geo/graphic design: the liminal space of the page

journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-12, 16:21 authored by Alison Barnes
For many geographers, the printed page is no longer a productive tool to engage contemporary definitions of place or debates surrounding the nonrepresentational. There is a discernible shift within the discipline toward creative research methods, including using media such as film or sound, with a perception that they are less “fixed” in nature. In this article, however, I suggest that, by developing “geo/graphic” work that draws on theories and practices from both cultural geography and graphic design, the page can be recast as a liminal space, a threshold between readers and their understanding and imagination. I propose that a book has the potential to offer a multisensory, interactive space of exploration for readers and that the construction of such geo/graphic work also offers researchers an additional creative method with which to understand place.

History

School

  • Design

Published in

Geographical Review

Volume

103

Issue

2

Pages

164 - 176

Publisher

Wiley

Version

  • P (Proof)

Rights holder

© American Geographical Society of New York

Publication date

2013-04-17

Copyright date

2013

ISSN

0016-7428

eISSN

1931-0846

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Alison Barnes. Deposit date: 12 March 2020

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