Abstract
AbstractThe present work explores the link between navigational processes and the experience of place by considering the case of Evenki reindeer herders and hunters. Our analysis shows how the idiosyncratic wayfinding methods of the Evenki result in a unique experience of place – a case that elucidates the important question of the impact of navigational processes on environmental experience, and that advances the debate between mental map theory and practical mastery theory in anthropology. We defend that their wayfinding methods – involving a particular gait, path networks, and vast hydrological and toponymical knowledge – allow the Evenki to navigate without a need for integrating egocentric and allocentric frames of reference. As a result, the Evenki experience themselves as free individuals moving through an environment that is alive and rife with possibility. This analysis reveals the ways in which wayfinding processes relying predominantly on route knowledge – as opposed to survey knowledge – affect environmental experience. Alternative methods of wayfinding can be seen as a form of resistance to the uniformisation of landscapes, and as a way of embracing the heterogeneity of space.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference33 articles.
1. Lived displacement among the Evenki of Yiengra;Mustonen;International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies,2019
2. Environment, cognition, and culture: Reconsidering the cognitive map;Heft;Journal of Environmental Psychology,2013
3. How to read a map: Remarks on the practical logic of navigation;Gell;Man,1985
4. Campbell, C. A. (2001). The Evenki system of paths: The study of travel and technology in east-central Siberia. Master's thesis, University of Alberta, Canada.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献