Scaring crows

Lorimer, H. (2013) Scaring crows. Geographical Review, 103(2), pp. 177-189. (doi: 10.1111/gere.12007)

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Abstract

A long-form essay, arranged in a sequence of eight segments, in which I travel the countryside in search of a missing person: the scarecrow. Different aspects of the centuries-old practice of scarecrow making and bird scaring are described. Traditionally constructed as a likeness of the human form and erected in newly sown fields as a visual method for warding off feeding birds, the existence of this striking farmland contraption is variously reported: as having all but vanished and yet of making unexpected reappearances; as materially functional and complexly meaningful; as a figure summoned up by cultural memory and personal recollection; and as a focus for mixed feelings of loss, nostalgia, estrangement, and community. A version of “geographical portraiture” accumulates, in which a single, scenic landmark stands as the essay's central fascination and simultaneously operates as a cipher for stories old and new, of agricultural society, country life, landscape politics, and rural values.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Lorimer, Professor Hayden
Authors: Lorimer, H.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Geographical and Earth Sciences
Journal Name:Geographical Review
ISSN:0016-7428

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