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Pursuing the Post-war Dream / Aled Singleton
Swansea University Author: Aled Singleton
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Copyright: The author, Aled M. Singleton, 2021. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License.
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DOI (Published version): 10.23889/SUthesis.61347
Abstract
Pursuing the Post War Dream offers methods to uncover the ‘rhizome’ (Thrift, 2000) which lies below the surface: offering ways to understand the role of the past in the present day. This inquiry arises from gerontology and develops a methodology which explores how the everyday – such as stories abou...
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Swansea
2021
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Institution: | Swansea University |
Degree level: | Doctoral |
Degree name: | Ph.D |
Supervisor: | Musselwhite, Charles ; Gower, Jon |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa61347 |
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2022-09-26T11:25:06Z |
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2022-09-26T12:35:36.3376336 v2 61347 2022-09-26 Pursuing the Post-war Dream de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1 0000-0002-1302-3776 Aled Singleton Aled Singleton true false 2022-09-26 SGE Pursuing the Post War Dream offers methods to uncover the ‘rhizome’ (Thrift, 2000) which lies below the surface: offering ways to understand the role of the past in the present day. This inquiry arises from gerontology and develops a methodology which explores how the everyday – such as stories about houses, streets and neighbourhoods – allows people from different generations to build empathy in research relationships. The work uses Caerleon, south Wales, as a case study to consider what economic, technological and social changes through the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s mean for contemporary ageing populations. Caerleon is a suitable site as statistics from Newport City Council (2017) convey that a fifth of citizens are aged 65 and above. On a theoretical level, this study uses walking interviews to explore how spaces act as thresholds to memories and levels of unconscious which may not otherwise reveal themselves – connecting to phenomena considered to be ‘non-representational’ in the work of Thrift (2008) or Anderson and Harrison (2010). This thesis uses relevant literature from gerontology, human geography and environmental psychology to develop a methodological framework which focuses on space more than time, particularly by using walking interviews. We also bridge between the disciplines of social science, literature and performance by following Solnit (2017, p. 5) where she advises that artists can ‘...open the doors and invite in prophesies, the unknown, the unfamiliar.’ The case study therefore involves a practical collaboration with a performance artist to make public site-specific performances based on the interview materials. The findings are presented as a guided walk where interview materials, public walking tours, responses to performance, and other contemporary materials are mapped on a specific geography. The main philosophical contribution of this study is a methodology which better understands space as unconscious maps or indexes to more deeply-held memories and affects. E-Thesis Swansea ageing, place attachment, psychogeography, performance, urbanism 2 2 2021 2021-02-02 10.23889/SUthesis.61347 ORCiD identifier: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1302-3776 COLLEGE NANME Geography COLLEGE CODE SGE Swansea University Musselwhite, Charles ; Gower, Jon Doctoral Ph.D ESRC 2022-09-26T12:35:36.3376336 2022-09-26T12:18:25.2196134 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences The Centre for Innovative Ageing Aled Singleton 0000-0002-1302-3776 1 61347__25224__84b71429a7dd4d79af923c47b714191d.pdf Singleton_Aled_M_PhD_Thesis_Final_Redacted_Signature.pdf 2022-09-26T12:33:58.6297477 Output 7569185 application/pdf E-Thesis – open access true Copyright: The author, Aled M. Singleton, 2021. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License. true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
Pursuing the Post-war Dream |
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Pursuing the Post-war Dream Aled Singleton |
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Pursuing the Post-war Dream |
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Pursuing the Post War Dream offers methods to uncover the ‘rhizome’ (Thrift, 2000) which lies below the surface: offering ways to understand the role of the past in the present day. This inquiry arises from gerontology and develops a methodology which explores how the everyday – such as stories about houses, streets and neighbourhoods – allows people from different generations to build empathy in research relationships. The work uses Caerleon, south Wales, as a case study to consider what economic, technological and social changes through the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s mean for contemporary ageing populations. Caerleon is a suitable site as statistics from Newport City Council (2017) convey that a fifth of citizens are aged 65 and above. On a theoretical level, this study uses walking interviews to explore how spaces act as thresholds to memories and levels of unconscious which may not otherwise reveal themselves – connecting to phenomena considered to be ‘non-representational’ in the work of Thrift (2008) or Anderson and Harrison (2010). This thesis uses relevant literature from gerontology, human geography and environmental psychology to develop a methodological framework which focuses on space more than time, particularly by using walking interviews. We also bridge between the disciplines of social science, literature and performance by following Solnit (2017, p. 5) where she advises that artists can ‘...open the doors and invite in prophesies, the unknown, the unfamiliar.’ The case study therefore involves a practical collaboration with a performance artist to make public site-specific performances based on the interview materials. The findings are presented as a guided walk where interview materials, public walking tours, responses to performance, and other contemporary materials are mapped on a specific geography. The main philosophical contribution of this study is a methodology which better understands space as unconscious maps or indexes to more deeply-held memories and affects. |
published_date |
2021-02-02T04:20:08Z |
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1763754333516595200 |
score |
11.037603 |