Books, bothies and thinking in place: a new contribution to geographies of the book

Hunt, R. (2017) Books, bothies and thinking in place: a new contribution to geographies of the book. Cultural Geographies, 24(4), pp. 513-538. (doi: 10.1177/1474474017695497)

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Abstract

This article considers a unique type of book: the ‘bothy book’. These are cultural artefacts formed within bothies, simple shelters which now form a historic feature of the contemporary Scottish rural landscape. These books stress the co-mingling of person and place where environments are continually made, and remade, created and shaped, through the practices users are part of, and party to. These books push the boundaries of Ogborn and Withers’, ‘geographies of the book’, opening this subfield to these conflicting circumstances and new ‘books’ to be studied. These books are also thoroughly entangled in the ‘dwelling’ lifeworld of these buildings and hence are both representational and performative as well as material objects. This larger problematic is traced in this article through the narratives of bothy users, using their words to provide insight into dwelling in such buildings and, through this, the overarching relationship between ‘Hut Thought Word’.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:HUNT, RACHEL
Authors: Hunt, R.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Geographical and Earth Sciences
Journal Name:Cultural Geographies
Publisher:SAGE Publications
ISSN:1474-4740
ISSN (Online):1477-0881
Published Online:19 March 2017

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