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Research article2003Peer reviewed

Natives and Aliens in the national landscape

Olwig, KR

Abstract

Discourses concerning the threat of alien species to national landscapes have a curious tendency to bleed into discourses concerning the threat of alien races and cultures to the native people and culture of these same nations. An explanation for these parallels, it will be argued, lies in a common point of departure in a particular post-Renaissance concept of landscape, space and nature, which ultimately derives from what is here termed “the cartographic-pictographic episteme.” This article will first trace the epistemic history of these ideas in a series of steps. It begins with a concrete case from Denmark and goes on to show how this case relates to larger European discourses dating back to the Renaissance. Keywords: Alien species, nationalism, cultural eugenics, xenophobia

Published in

Landscape Research
2003, Volume: 28, number: 1, pages: 61-74

      SLU Authors

    • Olwig, Kenneth

      • Department of Landscape Planning Alnarp, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Landscape Architecture
    Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/01426390306525

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/1607