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Curating connections: Exploring a British national park with young asylum seekers

Curating connections: Exploring a British national park with young asylum seekers
Curating connections: Exploring a British national park with young asylum seekers
This article reflects upon the authors' involvement with a walking project in the New Forest, a national park in the United Kingdom, for which we collaborated with a group of young male asylum seekers, community partners, and multimodal artists. Through the use of visual and digital media as sensory and collaborative tools of sense making, we explore the nested meanings of walking and of curated nature contact. The article reveals how walking may not be a (politically) neutral act, but rather a process of solidarity, support, and unfolding experience. We consider how walking and the arts activities of the project resulted in a form of conversation with the landscape and took on an affectively involved, empathetic orientation. We further elucidate how the project became entwined with the inherently interrupted nature of relations and experiences for those trapped in the asylum system. In conceptualizing “curation” as both in(ter)vention and care, we argue that research in the politicized sphere of forced migration and asylum has to integrate with the ethical commitment to create safe spaces of encounter and connection. In so doing, this article makes an original contribution, both theoretically and methodologically, to anthropological debates on migration, interculturality, and sensory ethnography.
asylum, curation, landscape, multimodality, sensory ethnography, walking
1559-9167
Armbruster, Heidi
44560127-8f08-4969-8b47-e19f21f23c37
Mansfield, Marie-Anne Helene
5a9d6b6d-6f2c-497b-ab73-a013f06600c5
Armbruster, Heidi
44560127-8f08-4969-8b47-e19f21f23c37
Mansfield, Marie-Anne Helene
5a9d6b6d-6f2c-497b-ab73-a013f06600c5

Armbruster, Heidi and Mansfield, Marie-Anne Helene (2025) Curating connections: Exploring a British national park with young asylum seekers. Anthropology and Humanism, [e70045]. (doi:10.1111/anhu.70045).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article reflects upon the authors' involvement with a walking project in the New Forest, a national park in the United Kingdom, for which we collaborated with a group of young male asylum seekers, community partners, and multimodal artists. Through the use of visual and digital media as sensory and collaborative tools of sense making, we explore the nested meanings of walking and of curated nature contact. The article reveals how walking may not be a (politically) neutral act, but rather a process of solidarity, support, and unfolding experience. We consider how walking and the arts activities of the project resulted in a form of conversation with the landscape and took on an affectively involved, empathetic orientation. We further elucidate how the project became entwined with the inherently interrupted nature of relations and experiences for those trapped in the asylum system. In conceptualizing “curation” as both in(ter)vention and care, we argue that research in the politicized sphere of forced migration and asylum has to integrate with the ethical commitment to create safe spaces of encounter and connection. In so doing, this article makes an original contribution, both theoretically and methodologically, to anthropological debates on migration, interculturality, and sensory ethnography.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 August 2025
Published date: 29 August 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s). Anthropology and Humanism published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Anthropological Association.
Keywords: asylum, curation, landscape, multimodality, sensory ethnography, walking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505624
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505624
ISSN: 1559-9167
PURE UUID: 208c2823-624e-4e17-9931-f38fa82de49a
ORCID for Heidi Armbruster: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5630-5896

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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2025 17:00
Last modified: 18 Oct 2025 01:39

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