ABSTRACT

Making Place, Making Self explores new understandings of place and place-making in late modernity, covering key themes of place and space, tourism and mobility, sexual difference and subjectivity. Using a series of individual life stories, it develops a fascinating polyvocal account of leisure and life journeys. These stories focus on journeys made to the North Cape in Norway, the most northern point of mainland Europe, which is both a tourist destination and an evocation of a reliable and secure point of reference, an idea that gives meaning to an individual's life. The theoretical core of the book draws on an inter-weaving of post-Lacanian versions of feminist psycho-analytical thinking with phenomenological and existential thinking, where place-making is linked with self-making and homecoming. By combining such ground-breaking theory with her innovative use of case studies, Inger Birkeland here provides a major contribution to the fields of cultural geography, tourism and feminist studies.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|16 pages

The Journey to Knowledge: Place-openness

chapter 5|8 pages

Travel, Masculinity and Femininity

chapter 6|10 pages

Travel as Rite de Passage

chapter 7|8 pages

The North as Epiphany

chapter 8|8 pages

Estrangement, Fluidity and Femininity

chapter 9|8 pages

Femininity and Open Space

chapter 10|8 pages

Travelling Internal and External Worlds

chapter 11|10 pages

A Feminine Aesthetics of Travel

chapter 12|10 pages

The Dawning of the Midnight Sun

chapter 13|20 pages

Making Place, Making Self: Choragraphy