The comfort of the river: understanding the affective geographies of angling waterscapes in young people’s coping practices
The comfort of the river: understanding the affective geographies of angling waterscapes in young people’s coping practices
This paper draws on ethnographic research with angling intervention programmes working with ‘disaffected’ young people in the UK to demonstrate how young people use the affective geographies of waterscapes to regulate their feelings and escape stressful lives. But rather than interpret the restorative or therapeutic quality of waterscapes as the consequence of (passive) immersion into green/blue spaces, we argue that ‘comfort’ is derived from an ongoing, active engagement with(in) the world. Drawing on works influenced by phenomenological theories and relational understandings of the more-than-human world, we illustrate how the affectual qualities of waterscapes are continually ‘woven’ into being through the material and embodied practices of young anglers. However, understanding why waterscapes ‘matter’ to young people also requires accounting for those assemblages originating in the past that shape these co-experienced worlds
356-367
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce
Brown, Adam
f5f4cdcc-8f1e-4d5e-93f2-b31bc9277a82
Stolk, Paul
e47218e5-45fe-4140-9226-fab84f6aa9e5
21 June 2017
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce
Brown, Adam
f5f4cdcc-8f1e-4d5e-93f2-b31bc9277a82
Stolk, Paul
e47218e5-45fe-4140-9226-fab84f6aa9e5
Djohari, Natalie, Brown, Adam and Stolk, Paul
(2017)
The comfort of the river: understanding the affective geographies of angling waterscapes in young people’s coping practices.
Children's Geographies, 16 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/14733285.2017.1341971).
Abstract
This paper draws on ethnographic research with angling intervention programmes working with ‘disaffected’ young people in the UK to demonstrate how young people use the affective geographies of waterscapes to regulate their feelings and escape stressful lives. But rather than interpret the restorative or therapeutic quality of waterscapes as the consequence of (passive) immersion into green/blue spaces, we argue that ‘comfort’ is derived from an ongoing, active engagement with(in) the world. Drawing on works influenced by phenomenological theories and relational understandings of the more-than-human world, we illustrate how the affectual qualities of waterscapes are continually ‘woven’ into being through the material and embodied practices of young anglers. However, understanding why waterscapes ‘matter’ to young people also requires accounting for those assemblages originating in the past that shape these co-experienced worlds
Text
Accepted version_The_Comfort_of_the_River
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 23 May 2017
Published date: 21 June 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 472011
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472011
ISSN: 1473-3285
PURE UUID: 50bdd4d4-33da-460f-afbb-4c2b5f163d98
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Date deposited: 23 Nov 2022 17:58
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16
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Author:
Natalie Djohari
Author:
Adam Brown
Author:
Paul Stolk
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