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Journal Article

Citation

Doerr NM. J. Cult. Geogr. 2018; 35(3): 315-333.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/08873631.2017.1419707

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

How does the meaning of space emerge and get negotiated when individuals of diverse backgrounds interact with each other? Studies reporting that African Americans tend not to spend time in outdoor space attribute this finding to limited access to resources, cultural values, degree of assimilation to mainstream practices, discrimination in outdoor space, or a perception that outdoor recreational space is "white space". Little research has addressed how such meanings relate to other meanings attached to outdoor space, let alone how this happens through interactions between people with different views on outdoor space. This article, based on interviews and participant observation of college students on an alternative break trip from the Northeastern U.S. to New Mexico in 2014, shows how students of various backgrounds experienced nature differently, how differences were articulated and explained, and how they subverted normalization processes that render not "being in tune with nature" as deficiency. Suggesting that geographies of race are fluid and influenced by individuals' agency, this article calls for encouraging students to examine the ways their subject positions have shaped their experiences and challenge cultural bias in what is deemed universally desirable.


Language: en

Keywords

African American; alternative break trips; construction of differences; geographies of race; normalization; outdoor activities

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