Place and Experience: A Philosophical Topography

While the sense of place is a familiar theme in poetry and art, philosophers have generally given little or no attention to place and the human relation to place. In Place and Experience, Jeff Malpas seeks to remedy this by advancing an account of the nature and significance of place as a complex but unitary structure that encompasses self and other, space and time, subjectivity and objectivity. Drawing on a range of sources from Proust and Wordsworth to Davidson, Strawson and Heidegger, he argues that the significance of place is not to be found in our experience of place so much as in the grounding of experience in place, and that this binding to place is not a contingent feature of human existence, but derives from the very nature of human thought, experience and identity as established in and through place.

• A detailed account of the nature and philosophical significance of place • Uses a range of sources from philosophy, literature, psychology and cultural geography • Accessibly written and suitable for graduate students

Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction: the influence of place; 1. The obscurity of place; 2. The structure of spatiality; 3. Holism, content and self; 4. Unity, locality and agency; 5. Agency and objectivity; 6. Self and the space of others; 7. The unity and complexity of place; 8. Place, past and person; Conclusion: the place of philosophy; Bibliography; Index.