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Explorations in Place Attachment

The book explores the unique contribution that geographers make to the concept of
place attachment, and related ideas of place identity and sense of place. It presents
six types of places to which people become attached and provides a global range
of empirical case studies to illustrate the theoretical foundations. The book reveals
that the types of places to which people bond are not discrete. Rather, a holistic
approach, one that seeks to understand the interactive and reinforcing qualities
between people and places, is most effective in advancing our understanding of
place attachment.

Jeffrey S. Smith is an Associate Professor of Geography at Kansas State Univer-


sity, USA.
Routledge Research in Culture, Space and Identity
Series editor:
Dr. Jon Anderson
School of Planning and Geography, Cardiff University, UK

The Routledge Research in Culture, Space and Identity Series offers a forum for
original and innovative research within cultural geography and connected fields.
Titles within the series are empirically and theoretically informed and explore a
range of dynamic and captivating topics. This series provides a forum for cutting
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For a full list of titles in this series, please visit www.routledge.com/Routledge-
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Memory, Place and Identity


Commemoration and Remembrance of War and Conflict
Edited by Danielle Drozdzewski, Sarah De Nardi and Emma Waterton

Surfing Spaces
Jon Anderson

Violence in Place, Cultural and Environmental Wounding


Amanda Kearney

Arts in Place
The Arts, the Urban and Social Practice
Cara Courage

Explorations in Place Attachment


Edited by Jeffrey S. Smith
Explorations in Place
Attachment

Edited by
Jeffrey S. Smith
First published 2018
by Routledge
2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN
and by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business
© 2018 selection and editorial matter, Jeffrey S. Smith; individual chapters,
the contributors
The right of Jeffrey S. Smith to be identified as the author of the editorial
material, and of the authors for their individual chapters, has been asserted in
accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act
1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or
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the publishers.
Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or
registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation
without intent to infringe.
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A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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ISBN: 978-1-138-72974-2 (hbk)


ISBN: 978-1-315-18961-1 (ebk)

Typeset in Times New Roman


by Apex CoVantage, LLC
To my mentors who inspired me and molded my thinking
(Daniel Arreola, Richard Nostrand, Stuart Givens, Charles
Collins) and to my wonderful, loving wife, Kim
Contents

List of figures xi
List of tables xiii
List of contributors xv

Introduction: putting place back in place attachment research 1


J E F F R E Y S . S MI T H

PART I
Secure places 17

1 Influence of memory on post-resettlement place attachment 19


M I C H A E L S TRONG

2 Hazardscapes: perceptions of tornado risk and the role


of place attachment in Central Oklahoma 33
R A N D Y A . P EP P L E R, KI MBE RLY E . KL OCKOW, A N D
R I C H A R D D . S MI T H

PART II
Socializing places 47

3 Constructing sense of place through place-labelization


in rural France 49
H É L È N E B . D UCROS

4 Exploring place attachment and a sense of community


in the Chacarita of Asuncion, Paraguay 65
J E F F R E Y S . S MI T H
viii Contents
PART III
Transformative places 81

5 Making place through the memorial landscape 83


C H R I S W. P O S T

6 Exploring place attachment and the immigrant experience


in comics and graphic novels: Shaun Tan’s The Arrival 97
S T E V E N M . S C H NE L L

PART IV
Restorative places 115

7 Constructing place attachment in Grand Teton National Park 117


Y O L O N D A Y O U NGS

8 Visitor perception, place attachment, and wilderness


management in the Adirondack High Peaks 133
T Y R A A . O L S TAD

PART V
Validating places 149

9 Baseball stadiums and urban reimaging in St. Louis:


shaping place and placelessness 151
D O U G L A S A . H URT

10 Avant-garde, wannabe Cowboys: place attachment among


Bohemians, Beatniks, and Hippies in Virginia City, Nevada 167
ENGRID BARNETT

11 Lost in time and space: the impact of place image


on Pitcairn Island 181
C H R I S T I N E K . JOHNS ON

PART VI
Vanishing places 195

12 Rethinking Fountainbridge: honoring the past


and greening the future 197
G E O F F R E Y L . B UCKL E Y
Contents ix
13 Landscapes of recovery: shifting senses of place attachment
in Kesennuma, Japan 211
R E X “ R J ” R O WL E Y

Epilogue: methodologies of place attachment research 227


PA U L C . A D AMS

Index 241
Figures

1.1 Location of Bairro Chipanga and former villages 23


1.2 Center of the community, Unidade 6 (Bairro Chipanga) 26
2.1 Map of Central Oklahoma 37
3.1 Successful végétalisation in Le Poët-Laval 55
3.2 Burying electric lines is the cost of beauty in Charroux 56
3.3 Logo posted at the entrance of Eguisheim 60
4.1 View of homes in the Chacarita 68
4.2 Resident of the Chacarita cleaning out the sewer connection 74
4.3 Murals on the west side of the Chacarita Community Center 75
5.1 Visitors read names on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial 88
5.2 The eastern gate of the Oklahoma City Memorial 89
5.3 Empty chairs that are lit at night to commemorate the victims
of the Alfred P. Murrah Building bombing 90
5.4 Good Deeds Chairs on Syracuse’s Quad in 2013 92
6.1 The disorienting details 101
6.2 Somewhat familiar, yet incomprehensible 101
6.3 The final scene from the Arrival’s apartment 102
6.4 Vast, often confounding landscapes . . . 103
6.5 The Arrival meets his companion 104
6.6 Finding the way in a bewildering new world 105
6.7 Dinner connections 106
6.8 A scene from the old country and the new world 107
7.1 Map of Grand Teton National Park 125
8.1 Location of Adirondack State Park 135
8.2 View of the High Peaks from Cascade Peak 136
8.3 View of the High Peaks from Heart Lake 136
8.4 Photo of Marcy Dam Pond 141
9.1 Map of the St. Louis urban core 152
9.2 A Sportsman’s Park postcard, circa 1950 155
9.3 A Busch Stadium II postcard with aerial perspective, 1967 157
9.4 Photo of Busch Stadium III 159
10.1 The Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, Nevada 176
11.1 Pitcairn Island landscape 184
11.2 Early Pitcairn community, circa 1825 186
xii Figures
11.3 Sign post with location markers on Pitcairn Island 188
12.1 Construction fence along Fountainbridge Road 201
12.2 Grove 2 Community Garden 204
12.3 Edinburgh Quay development near Leamington Lift Bridge 207
13.1 Map of study sites and areas in Kesennuma inundated
by the 3/11 tsunami 213
13.2 Photo of buildings on Kesennuma’s central peninsula 215
13.3 Photo of Hoya Boya 218
13.4 Nango Recovery Housing near Minami-Kesennuma Station 221
Tables

1.1 Household characteristics of respondents 25


1.2 Perspectives on renaming the resettlement site 27
2.1 Risk perception among town hall participants, 2012 39
2.2 Risk perception among Central Oklahoma survey
participants, 2016 41
2.3 Likelihood of Central Oklahoma residents to prepare for
tornadoes or heed tornado warnings, 2016 42
Contributors

Paul C. Adams is Professor in the Department of Geography and the Environ-


ment at the University of Texas, Austin. He holds a Ph.D. from the University
of Wisconsin, Madison. His research interests include geography of media and
communication, representations of places, landscapes and environments, criti-
cal geopolitics, and agency and identity.
Engrid Barnett earned her Ph.D. in cultural geography from the University of
Nevada, Reno. Her research strives to provide a more holistic interpretation of
the history of the 1960s within the context of cultural geography. She teaches
geography, humanities, and French courses at the University of Nevada, Reno.
Geoffrey L. Buckley is Professor of Geography at Ohio University. He holds a
Master’s degree from the University of Oregon and a Ph.D. from the University
of Maryland. His research interests include historical geography, public lands,
urban sustainability, environmental justice, and the evolution of mining land-
scapes. He is co-editor of North American Odyssey: Historical Geographies
for the Twenty-first Century (2014).
Hélène B. Ducros earned her J.D. and Ph.D. in geography from the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is interested in heritage landscapes and the
role of memory, identity, culture, and place in local development.
Douglas A. Hurt is Assistant Teaching Professor and Director of Undergradu-
ate Studies in the Department of Geography at the University of Missouri.
His research interests include geographic patterns resulting from attachment
to place, public memory, and heritage tourism, as well as sport and regional
identity.
Christine K. Johnson is affiliated with the University of Nevada, Reno, teaching
in the departments of anthropology and geography. She holds a Ph.D. in cultural
geography and a Master’s in anthropology from the University of Nevada. Her
primary research interest is place image, with additional interests in Pacific
history and indigenous cultures.
Kimberly E. Klockow is a UCAR Research Scientist I and Policy Advisor at the
NOAA Office of Weather and Air Quality in Norman, Oklahoma. She earned
xvi Contributors
her Ph.D. in geography from the University of Oklahoma. Her research interests
center on the intersections of weather and climate risk with risk perception,
place attachment, spatial cognition, and cartographic representations of risk.
Tyra A. Olstad, an alumna of Dartmouth College, the University of Wyoming,
and Kansas State University, is currently an Assistant Professor of Geography
and Environmental Sustainability at SUNY Oneonta. Her research draws on her
experience as a park ranger, physical science technician, and summit steward at
numerous Parks and Forests throughout the United States, where she explores
the intersections of landscape perception, place attachment, land management,
and wilderness.
Randy A. Peppler is the director of a meteorological institute and a lecturer in
geography and environmental sustainability at the University of Oklahoma. He
is interested in placed-based knowledge formation and risk perception.
Chris W. Post is an Associate Professor of Geography at Kent State University at
Stark. His research focuses on the heritage of place, particularly as it becomes
manifest on the cultural landscape.
Rex “RJ” Rowley is an Associate Professor of Geography at Illinois State Uni-
versity. He has research interests in sense of place, urban geography, and
geographic information science. He makes regular trips back to Kesennuma,
Japan, with his students as part of a study abroad field class.
Steven M. Schnell is a Professor in the Department of Geography at Kutztown
University in Kutztown, Pennsylvania. His research focuses on the myriad ways
that people create attachments to place. He is currently editor of the Journal of
Cultural Geography.
Jeffrey S. Smith is an Associate Professor of Geography at Kansas State Uni-
versity. His research focuses on cultural change, landscape analysis, and place
attachment.
Michael Strong is an Assistant Professor at Glendale Community College in
Phoenix, Arizona. His research interests address the impact that rapidly chang-
ing environments have on place attachment. He has worked on projects explor-
ing place attachment at several sites in Mozambique.
Yolonda Youngs is an Assistant Professor at Idaho State University. She has a
Ph.D. in geography from Arizona State University. Her research specialties are
environmental historical geography, cultural landscapes, visual media, tourism
and outdoor recreation, and national parks and protected areas.
Introduction
Putting place back in place
attachment research
Jeffrey S. Smith

Humans are curious creatures; sometimes the emotional ties they make to a place
defy logic. What compels people to rebuild their home in the same location that
was destroyed by a devastating natural disaster? Why do people remain rooted in
small, rural towns with dwindling populations and limited employment opportu-
nities? Why do people return to the same vacation spot annually when there are
boundless opportunities elsewhere? What compels people to become so emotion-
ally connected to a place? How can the geographic perspective enhance our under-
standing of why people develop such intense feelings toward a place? These are
the type of inquiries this book seeks to answer. It provides an innovative examina-
tion of the types of places to which people become emotionally attached.
In recent years decision makers have begun seeking ways to improve overall
quality of life by building upon people’s connection with place. Government offi-
cials are searching for ways to develop more resident-friendly communities, pro-
grams that might help youth of all religious and cultural backgrounds as well as the
elderly feel more connected to the place they live. Administrators at assisted care
facilities are looking for methods to foster a greater sense of community among
retirement-aged residents. International aid organizations are experimenting with
various ways to help displaced persons feel more at home in refugee camps. For
most people life takes on more meaning and individuals feel more content when
they develop connections to a place; place matters.
There is a long tradition among North American geographers who have sought a
richer understanding of the character and qualities of place(s). Over 50 years ago,
at a time when the discipline was searching for its identity, William Pattison (1964)
identified that understanding the nature of places with all of their unique qualities,
as well as how human interact with those places, bind geographers together. In
his 1985 Presidential Address to the convocation of the Association of American
Geographers, Peirce Lewis (1985) encouraged geographers to continue seeking
a deeper understanding of the character of places and share that knowledge with
others through thick description. A lot has changed within geography since Lewis’s
address. Today geography is in an age where a myopic obsession with geospatial
techniques (e.g., remote sensing, GIS, geovisualization) drives the discipline. Yet,
one of the things that continues to hold geography and geographers together is a
desire to learn about places and interpret how people interact with those places
(Hansen 2008; Murphy 2014).
2 Jeffrey S. Smith
Place is defined as “a meaningful location, spaces that people are attached
to in one way or another” (Cresswell 2004, 7). At its root, place is a location
where human activity unfolds (Wright 1947). Place is both physical and social
and requires human action to define its significance (Casey 2001; Young 2001).
Abstract space becomes meaningful as we modify our surrounding environment in
a manner that resonates with our soul, our inner being. Geographer John Agnew’s
(1987) seminal work identifies three fundamental aspects of meaningful locations.
Location refers to the fact that every place is located somewhere either absolutely
(e.g., longitude and latitude) or relatively (in relation to other places). Second,
every place has a unique set of characteristics or its setting sets it apart from other
places. In other words, every place has a locale. Third, and most important to this
book, is that every place is imbued with a sense of place, that is, how we interact
with places and the emotional connections we develop with a place.
The need to belong to other people as well as places is a universal constant and
is central to the human experience. As French philosopher, Simone Weil said,
“[T]o be rooted in a place is the most important and least recognized need of the
human soul” (Weil 1952, 43). Bonding with place grounds us by connecting us to
the past, situating us in a larger social or physical environment, and helps shape our
future interactions. “To be human is to live in a world that is filled with significant
places: to be human is to have and know your place” (Relph 1976, 1). I assert that
the focus on understanding people’s connection to place falls under the umbrella
of Place Attachment.

Cognate perspectives
Place attachment is defined as the emotional bond that develops between a per-
son and a place. Because the concept is so complex involving psychological and
sociological as well as geographic aspects, the term is often misunderstood and
imprecisely defined. To make matters worse, the methods of studying place attach-
ment vary drastically across disciplines. Some scholars approach their research
from a phenomenological perspective striving to interpret how people interact with
a place and the meaning it holds (Seamon and Sowers 2008; Seamon 2014). By
comparison others take a more positivist, quantitative approach seeking to measure
degrees of emotional connection with little, if any, attention given to the quali-
ties of place. General consensus among scholars determines that place attachment
commonly “involves the elaborate interplay of emotion, cognition, and behavior
in reference to place” (Ponzetti 2003, 1).
Scholars grounded in a spectrum of disciplinary backgrounds including anthro-
pology, art history, cultural studies, community planning, family studies, geogra-
phy, gerontology, philosophy, psychology, sociology, and tourism studies provide
diverse frameworks for understanding place attachment (Low and Altman 1992;
Ponzetti 2003). Over the past 40 years, scholarship on place attachment has pro-
liferated with no less than 400 publications appearing in more than 120 different
journals (Lewicka 2011). Across these various disciplines a multitude of terms
and definitions are used to refer to the emotional connection people develop for a
Introduction 3
place including: emotional ties to place (Chamlee-Wright and Storr 2009; Lewicka
2005; Mattila 2001; van der Graaf 2008), homeland (Nostrand 1992; Nostrand and
Estaville 2001; Smith and White 2004), insideness (Ponzetti 2003; Relph 1976;
Rowles 1990; Seamon 2008), place dependence (Hernández et al. 2014; Jorgensen
and Stedman 2006; Pretty et al. 2003; Raymond et al. 2010), place identity (Blake
1999; Chow and Healy 2008; Hernández et al. 2007; Marsh 1987; Proshansky et al.
1983), rootedness (McAndrew 1998; Tuan 1980), sense of community (Nasar and
Julian 1995; Pretty et al. 2003; Perkins and Long 2002), sense of place (de Wit
2013; Hays 1998; Jackson 1994; Lewis 1979; Post 2008), and topophilia/love of
place (Francaviglia 2003; Tuan 1974). “The diversity of definitions . . . reflect
the different emphasis that various fields put on specific components of place and
place attachment” (Manzo and Devine-Wright 2014, 2). For example, the term
place identity is used in different ways depending on one’s disciplinary back-
ground (Seamon 2014). Psychologists use place identity to refer to how people
see themselves in a particular place (e.g., Mihaylov and Perkins 2014) whereas
geographers use the same term to refer to the character and qualities of a place
(e.g., Schnell 2003; Shortridge 1989; Wishart 2013). Because terminology varies,
confusion, miscommunication, debate, and sometimes competition has prevailed
with little cross-pollination as few scholars engage in discourse that transcends
disciplinary boundaries (Casey 2001; Entrikin 2001).
This book seeks to break down disciplinary boundaries and contribute to the
literature in three significant ways. First, it enhances our understanding of the
place component within place attachment research by providing a typology that
showcases six types of places to which people become attached. Opportunities
abound for scholars to examine these six types of places from a variety of disci-
plinary perspectives. Second, among the numerous reviews of place attachment
research (e.g., Lewicka 2011), the work by geographers has been largely ignored.
This volume helps rectify that oversight by drawing attention to the extensive body
of work by past and present geographers. Because place matters, the geographic
perspective provides valuable insight that should not be overlooked. Third, it is
intended that the book will spur further discussion and research on place attach-
ment both within geography and across cognate fields. The spatially grounded
questions asked by geographers should provide a fresh and innovative perspec-
tive for a variety of scholars seeking to better understand the place attachment
phenomenon. Building upon the geographic perspective, it is easy to envision a
wide variety of real-world applications for place attachment research including
adaptations to global climate change, environmental migration, risk perception and
natural hazards response, land use conflicts, resource management, urban renewal,
community design, and social housing.

Five decades of research on place attachment


Over the course of five decades, research on place attachment has grown by leaps
and bounds. The first recognized work to focus on place attachment was by psy-
chologist Marc Fried (1963) who looked at the impact of urban renewal on Boston’s
4 Jeffrey S. Smith
West End. He found that displaced residents were so attached to their neighbor-
hood that when they were forced to move, the loss they felt was akin to losing
a loved one. In the 1970s humanistic geographers picked up the banner and led
the charge to better understand people’s emotional connection to place. Over the
course of four years, Yi-Fu Tuan published three seminal works that made signifi-
cant advances in the field. Tuan’s breakthrough book, Topophilia (love of place),
focuses on the values, attitudes, and perceptions that people have for places (Tuan
1974). In 1976 his book chapter titled Geopiety provides an innovative explora-
tion of the intersection between a person’s devotion to place and their native land
or country (Tuan 1976). Then, in 1977 Tuan solidified his concepts in the book
Space and Place where he writes that place is “an archive of fond memories and
splendid achievements that inspire the present; place is permanent and hence reas-
suring to man,” and “the more ties there are to a place, the stronger is the emotional
bond” (Tuan 1977, 154, 158). In 1976, one of Tuan’s contemporaries, Edward
Relph, published Place and Placelessness. From a phenomenological approach,
Relph’s work seeks to understand the continuum of feelings and connections (from
insideness to outsideness) that people have for places (Relph 1976). The book still
informs many disciplines including geography, architecture, and landscape design
because it expands our vocabulary and concepts regarding people’s emotional
connection to place (Seamon and Sowers 2008). Together, Tuan and Relph broke
new ground and significantly advanced our understanding of people’s emotional
relationship with place(s). Because of their work, the discipline of geography had
arguably become the home of place attachment research.
In the 1980s cultural geographers’ perspective on the study of place took a
new turn. Critics asserted that research on place had become focused on fixed
and static locations, overlooking the dynamic and evolving qualities of places.
Furthermore, the main thrust of research was too concerned with how individuals
interact with a place and neglected how groups of people define a place. Social
theorists including John Agnew, Michael Dear, Mona Domosh, Doreen Massey,
Don Mitchell, Robert Sack, Edward Soja, and Nigel Thrift helped shape a new
direction on place research, one that advanced an understanding of how social
and economic forces shape a place and in turn how that place shapes people’s
lives (Sack 1988; Young 2001).
Filling the void left by geographers, environmental psychologists took over the
main thrust of research on place attachment. The 1980s were largely a definitional
era where various concepts were presented, discussed, and debated. Some of the
key research was advanced by Irwin Altman (1975) whose work examined how
individuals and groups carve out territories for themselves. Numerous publications
by Harrold Proshansky and his colleagues (1978, 1983) focused on how people
self-identify in a particular place. Shumaker and Taylor (1983) is one of numerous
works that seek to identify multidimensional explanations for peoples’ attachment
to place (i.e., demographic, economic, race/ethnicity).
In more recent decades environmental psychologists have continued to spear-
head research on place attachment. In 1992 Altman and Low edited a book by
which all subsequent publications on place attachment are compared. Eighteen
Introduction 5
years later Scannell and Gifford (2010) advanced the field again by providing
accessible definitions and creating the first model for place attachment research
(see discussion as follows). In 2011, Maria Lewicka conducted the most complete
review summarizing the entire field of place attachment over the last 40 years.
Lynne Manzo and Patrick Devine-Wright (both psychologists by training) pub-
lished the most recent major work on place attachment (2014). Their edited book
contains 15 chapters that are divided into three sections (theory, methods, and
applications). Despite being advertised as offering the most current understanding
about place attachment, the book provides a skewed perspective on the vast body
of research because most of the chapters reflect a preoccupation with predictors
of attachment that seek to quantify the strength of bonds people have for a place.
Only one chapter is written by a geographer. Moreover, David Seamon’s chapter
is the only one that focuses on advancing our understanding of place attachment
from a humanistic, phenomenological perspective. Despite their pivotal role in
the 1970s, in more recent decades the work of cultural-historical geographers
has been largely overlooked. The overall focus on place attachment research has
shifted from a concern with understanding the qualities of place to measuring the
emotional intensity people have for places (Hernández et al. 2014; Lewicka 2011;
Williams 2014). It is clear that the field has indeed expanded beyond the emergent
stage to an application stage (Scannell and Gifford 2014), but disciplinary lines
are still rarely crossed.

Person, place, and process


In 2010 Leila Scannell and Robert Gifford published “Defining Place Attachment:
A Tripartite Organizational Framework.” The article is one of the most revolution-
ary works in the field because it synthesizes the vast place attachment research
into a manageable model comprised of three key aspects (Person, Place, and Pro-
cess). The Person component has mainly been the domain of social psycholo-
gists, sociologists, and anthropologists. It focuses on who is attached to a place.
Research started out by looking at the different characteristics of individuals, but
more recently began examining how groups of people bond with a particular place.
One of the key underlying concepts is sense of community – groups of people
develop an attachment to place through shared symbolic meaning among members
of the group.
The Place component has largely been (and remains) the domain of geogra-
phers. This component focuses on to what people are attached and varies across
scale, from the microscale (e.g., room in a house) to macro-scale (e.g., city or
country). Places can be both social as well as physical in nature. Psychologists
have equated social places with degrees of bonding and physical places with root-
edness (Scannell and Gifford 2010). By comparison, geographers commonly look
at what makes each place unique. For example, Los Angeles with its bright lights,
ethnic diversity, and Hollywood culture, as well as its amenable Mediterranean cli-
mate is a good example of both a social place and a physical place to which people
have strong feelings of connection. Cultural-historical geographers typically focus
6 Jeffrey S. Smith
on the socially constructed spaces and seek to understand how they give meaning
to the lives of people who dwell there. Psychologists have become increasingly
interested in the Place component, but their research tends to focus on identify-
ing what belongs in a place as well as what elements do not fit in a place (e.g.,
Devine-Wright 2009)
The Process component has been the overwhelming preoccupation of environ-
mental psychologists, especially in Europe. The focus is on how a place becomes
meaningful and what impact a place has on individuals; how does the mind react to
being in a place? Commonly employing either single or multidimensional psycho-
metric questionnaires, their main goal is to measure degrees of attached feelings
and find correlations or predictive variables. Length of time in residence is the
most common variable. Scannell and Gifford (2010) identify three subparts to the
process component (affect – emotional impact, cognition – memories and thoughts
that people have, and behavior – how people react physically to a place). Some
other emerging concepts being explored include proximity maintaining (individu-
als want to be close to a place they love), homesickness (feelings of detachment),
and reconstruction of places (bringing elements of a place people love to their
current location). The newest line of research pursued by environmental psycholo-
gists examines the expressive (or symbolic) meaning of places to which people
are attached.
According to Maria Lewicka (2011), the person and process components have
received the most scrutiny among scholars. By comparison, despite being the most
important dimension of place attachment (Scannell and Gifford 2010), place has
received the least amount of attention (Lewicka 2011). As Bernardo Hernández
and his colleagues write, research on place attachment “should progress from
analyzing what and how much, to analyzing other questions such as how, where,
when, and why.” (Hernández et al. 2014, 134). The emphasis placed on under-
standing differences among individuals has probably inhibited the development
of place attachment theory (Lewicka 2011).

Typology of places
I assert that the work by geographers (past and present) has much to offer place
attachment research, and geographers are well equipped to shed more light on the
place component because they have the inherent perspective and tools needed to
look at the qualities of places. From an interrogation of the literature (especially
geography) as it intersects with the concepts of place and place attachment and
drawing upon concepts found in other disciplines, I have identified six types of
places to which people become attached. These six places comprise a typology of
places where specific human activity lends itself for the emotional bonding with
that place. To date, I am unaware of any such typology. These six types of places
are not exhaustive nor are they mutually exclusive. Although each chapter in this
book is directly linked to one of the six types, it will become evident (especially
in the epilogue) that they also indirectly support and reinforce other categories
of places. This illustrates that place is a complex idea and there is considerable
Introduction 7
overlap in the types of places to which people become attached. The remainder of
this introductory chapter explains the six types of places, identifies seminal works
previously published, and highlights how each of the chapters in this book add
clarity, through empirical examples, to the typology. The critical epilogue identi-
fies common themes that transcend chapters and reinforce geography’s contribu-
tion to place attachment research.

Secure places
Of the six types of places, this is the most intuitive. Secure places are locations
where people attach deep emotional meaning because they feel safe and secure in
that setting; they are womb-like places. Home is the most common example of a
secure place. With notable exceptions, most people feel the strongest attachment
to home because they tend to feel at ease and protected from risk and danger.
From scientific research to product advertising, numerous examples illustrate
the importance that “home” plays in people’s emotional psyche. Clare Marcus’s
(1995) exploration of the meaning of home is one such example. Another is Star-
buck’s 2016 advertising campaign that encourages people to drink Starbuck’s cof-
fee because it gives you a sense of home no matter where you travel. Likewise,
among the long-time Hispano residents of the upper Rio Grande region, the term
La Querencia is used to effectively capture the essence of secure places. Querencia
comes from the Castilian (Old) Spanish word querer (to love or want) and it refers
to the place of your heart’s desire, the central place that anchors you, the place
where you feel completely at home, where you belong (Fauntleroy 1997).
Secure places are found at different scales – individual scale, small group scale,
and community scale. At the macro-scale the homeland concept is particularly
relevant. As Nostrand and Estaville (1993) articulate, one of the key ingredients
needed for the development of a homeland is a deep emotional connection to place,
a place you are willing to defend with your life. If we consider secure places from
a completely different perspective, a prison might be considered a secure place
because it offers a stable and predictable environment for inmates.
Part I of this book explores secure places from two distinct perspectives. In
Chapter 1, Michael Strong explains how residents’ shared memories of home and
strong connections to place eased their transition to a new settlement in Mozam-
bique. Chapter 2 by Randy Peppler, Kim Klockow, and Richard Smith looks at
perceptions of tornado risk and how people’s false sense of security at home influ-
ences their outlook toward risk management.

Socializing places
From a post-structuralist perspective, Doreen Massey (2005) argues that places are
dynamic, individualistic, and relational. People’s identity and emotional connec-
tions are shaped by the interpersonal relations that unfold in a particular place and
time. Socializing places are locations with a strong sense of community or places
where people feel welcome in a social environment. The work by Ray Oldenburg
8 Jeffrey S. Smith
(1989) on Third Places is an excellent example of socializing places. Oldenburg’s
research tells us that our primary place is our home and people’s secondary place
is found at work; the place where we traditionally spend most of our time during
the week. Third places are where we socialize (e.g., cafes, churches, bars, beauty
salons, night-clubs). One of the most effective ways in which people develop a
strong attachment to place is through the interaction they have with others in that
place (Barcus and Brunn 2009; Milligan 1998).
In communities throughout Spain and Latin America the term resolana nicely
captures the essence of a socializing place. Resolana refers to a spot where mem-
bers of the community gather to while away the day discussing current events
(Romero 2001). A popular place to gather is on the central plaza sitting on benches
under shady vegetation within sight of the kiosk (bandstand). The central plaza is
an inviting example of a socializing place that lies at the heart of the community,
a place where people meet to affirm their membership within the community
(Smith 2004).
Part II of this book begins with Hélène Ducros’s exploration of rural French
villages and how the built environment in cultural heritage sites is shaped to foster
feelings of place attachment among locals and visitors. In Chapter 4, Jeffrey Smith
examines how residents of an informal neighborhood (squatter settlement) have
dispelled the area’s crime-infested reputation and resisted the government’s efforts
at redevelopment by demonstrating that the neighborhood has a strong sense of
community.

Transformative places
Transformative places are where significant events took place in a person’s life-
time or places of personal growth and achievement. A different way to think about
transformative places is that they are key locations that help us tell the story of our
life. Within environmental psychology this line of research falls within the purview
of environmental autobiography where the goal is to understand the importance of
places over the course of a person’s lifetime (Rivlin 1982).
In numerous small towns across the country, former residents (especially retir-
ees) are returning to their hometown because it was an important, transformative
place in their life (Howell 1983; Rowles 1990; Rubenstein and Parmelee 1992).
This is but one example of a larger body of literature that seeks to explain people’s
desire to physically connect with places rooted in the past or grounded in one’s
memories (Donohoe 2014; Hoelscher and Alderman 2004; Lowenthal 2015). Not
only is home (and one’s hometown) an example of a transformative place, but so
are venues for athletic or artistic events. To many young males a football field or
a baseball diamond was the site where they experienced personal achievement
leading to a transformation in their life. Bruce Springsteen’s 1984 song “Glory
Days” captures the essence of transformative places. Other venues could be the
site of a dance recital or stage performance. If we extend the idea of transformative
places, a battlefield in war could be another example. Many veterans of World War
II are returning to Normandy Beach because it was a transformative place in their
Introduction 9
life. Jamie Gillen (2014) writes about the growth of tourism in Vietnam as a part
of the American/Vietnam War. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania might be another trans-
formative place, not because veterans are returning there, but because the place
was instrumental in the transformation of American society during the Civil War.
Part III of this book begins with Chris Post’s look at the memorialized land-
scapes of three tragic events and shows how visitor empathy and corporeal inter-
action leads to feelings of place attachment. Chapter 6 features Steven Schnell’s
truly innovative look at how a graphic novel depicts place, place attachment, and
place alienation among immigrants.

Restorative places
As early as the 1980s the Japanese government began encouraging its citizens to
take strolls in the woods to promote better health, a practice known as shinrin-yoku
(forest bathing) (Sifferlin 2016). Not only is spending time in nature associated
with certain health benefits (e.g., lower blood pressure and reduce the risks of some
diseases), but researchers have found that hiking in a forested area induces positive
physiological reactions (Meade and Emch 2000). Restorative places are locations
that kindle a healthy spirit or quiet the mind. Psychologists have found that humans
become emotionally attached to wilderness areas including seaside and mountain-
ous locations because we experience serene feelings there (Williams 2014).
This category of place originates from the work of William Wyckoff and Lary
Dilsaver (1995), which focused on the restorative qualities of the Mountainous
West. Mountains are an example of restorative places as an outgrowth of the nine-
teenth-century romanticism which envisioned many western mountain settings as
healthy and idyllic retreats from the increasing urbanized and fast-paced world
beyond (Wyckoff and Dilsaver 1995). Much of Kevin Blake’s work on mountain
symbolism fits nicely within this category of places to which we become attached
(Blake 1999, 2008, 2010). Beyond mountains, to what other natural areas do we
feel emotionally connected? Do people become attached to houses of worship for
the same restorative qualities? Are national parks (e.g., Grand Canyon N.P. and
Yosemite N.P.) so overrun with visitors that they have lost their emotional appeal
and restorative qualities?
Part IV of this book features two chapters that speak to the attached feelings
people develop for wilderness areas. Chapter 7 by Yolonda Youngs focuses on the
perspective of outdoor tour guides in Grand Teton National Park, while in Chap-
ter 8 Tyra Olstad explores how rangers (with the help of outdoor enthusiasts) in
the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York manage the state park to preserve
it as a “wilderness.”

Validating places
There are places where human activity is infused with shared meaning. As dis-
cussed above, some of those places center around a social function. In other cases,
there are places that serve as memorials to some past event, tragic or otherwise
10 Jeffrey S. Smith
(e.g., Tiananmen Square, New York City’s World Trade Center; Alfred P. Murrah
building in Oklahoma City) (see also: Foote 1997). Validating places are locations
where personal and group identity is reinforced. By participating and investing
ourselves in a place, participants come to feel a part of that place and associate
their identity with that place (Seamon 2014). Some people find the setting of a
class reunion to be a validating place. Another is Mecca, Saudi Arabia where the
religious beliefs of over two million Muslim people are validated.
Countless sporting venues worldwide also serve as the locus of validation. After
the home team has won, people feel like their lives have meaning and what they
value has meaning; an aspect of their lives, even if only temporarily, has been
affirmed. It comes as no surprise that people then project those feelings by display-
ing their team’s logo on their personal property; the logo becomes the outward
expression of the strong feelings of attachment that people develop for a place that
legitimizes some aspect of their life. Another aspect of validating places is genera-
tional ties to the same place. In Peru, descendants of the Inca display the skulls of
their ancestors in a prominent place in the house (e.g., fireplace mantel) as a way
to demonstrate their property rights. At the same time, knowing that generations
of one’s ancestors lived and breathed in the same place validates one’s life and
contributes to a strong attachment to that place.
Part V of this book begins with Douglas Hurt’s examination of how the progres-
sion of three baseball stadiums in St. Louis, Missouri reflects changes in both the
urban morphology and social psyche. He also assesses the role those stadia play
in fostering (or hindering) feelings of place attachment among city residents. In
Chapter 10 Engrid Barnett explores the quasi-ghost town of Virginia City, Nevada
to illustrate how the avant-garde, inspired by the Wild West myth, have carved
out a home and developed a unique place attachment. Then, Christine Johnson
(Chapter 11) follows in the wake of the HMS Bounty to showcase how a paradisical
island in the Pacific (Pitcairn) has suffered a terrible reputation, yet its residents
maintain a strong attachment to place.

Vanishing places
One of the most exciting areas within place attachment research looks at the
dynamic qualities (the changes in place) that are occurring and how that affects
people’s emotional bonds to place. Intuitively vanishing places are locations that
have been lost or humanity is at risk of losing. This is a new and emerging research
theme within environmental psychology, but geographers are well positioned to
continue contributing to this line of research given their proclivity for understand-
ing human-environmental interactions and the tools at their disposal.
Based on ideas inspired by Stedman et al. (2014), I advance four categories
of vanishing places. Destruction – These are places destroyed by a rapid, cata-
strophic event. The emphasis is placed on locations that are lost very quickly. The
San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and Super
Storm Sandy in 2012 are all prime examples of vanishing places. On the night of
May 4, 2007 an EF5 tornado destroyed 95 percent of the small, Great Plains’ town
Introduction 11
of Greensburg, Kansas. With 23 percent of the town’s population comprised of
retired-aged people, this tragic event provided an opportunity to better understand
how retirees develop strong feelings of attachment to place. Smith and Cartlidge
(2011) found that key landmarks were incredibly important to retired residents
because it helps them navigate through town, and age-specific businesses were
vital to their connections to the community.
Depletion – These are places where there is a gradual loss of a natural resource
or population; the emphasis is on slow change. From an environmental perspec-
tive, water depletion in the High Plains Aquifer and the retreating glaciers in
Glacier National Park are two examples. Ben Marsh (1987) examined people’s
attachment to the coal mining districts of Appalachia and despite the depletion of
coal in the region and the loss of viable employment opportunities, people refused
to leave. Smith and McAlister (2015) explore the attachment that residents of the
Great Plains have for their local county seat of government in the face of protracted
population decline. A particularly timely topic ripe for intense scrutiny centers on
how people respond to climate change (e.g., sea level rise). Preliminary research
points to two responses including in situ adaption and environmental migration
(see: Koubi et al. 2016).
Encroachment – These are places where outside cultural practices threaten the
traditional character of the place. Ethnically homogenous neighborhoods in East
Los Angeles is an example. Through the process of invasion and succession neigh-
borhoods once dominated by African Americans have tipped and become largely
Latino barrios. The same process is occurring again as Asian origin populations
encroach upon the Latinos (see: Cheng 2013).
Restriction – These are places where certain activities are preferred or given
preference over other activities. A long list of cultural geographers on both sides
of the Atlantic including James and Nancy Duncan (2004); David Ley and Heather
Smith (2000); Doreen Massey (1994); Gillian Rose (1990); and David Sibley
(1995) have delved deep into this line of thinking.
In the final section of this book Geoffrey Buckley (Chapter 12) and Rex (RJ)
Rowley (Chapter 13) provide two examples of vanishing places. Buckley explores
how the Fountainbridge neighborhood in Edinburgh, Scotland is resisting change
accompanied by growing tourism and seeking to hold on and honor its industrial
past. Then, RJ Rowley draws upon his fieldwork in the fishing village of Kesen-
numa, Japan to explain how residents’ connection to the sea is a double-edged
sword. The 2011 earthquake and tsunami swept away most of what they knew in
life, but their deep emotional ties to home gives them hope for the future. In the
epilogue Paul Adams synthesizes the information shared and identifies common
themes that transcend chapters and reinforce geography’s contribution to place
attachment research.
By placing emphasis on the PLACE component in place attachment research,
we have an opportunity to make significant contributions to society. Not only
will we better understand our individual identity and where we belong within
society, but we can also foster a richer sense of community that enables people to
develop emotionally healthy lives. City planners can design communities that are
12 Jeffrey S. Smith
more user-friendly and accommodating to people of all ages and backgrounds.
Place attachment research will also help us enact effective urban redevelopment
and social housing projects. The possible applications for solid place attachment
research are limited only by our imagination.
Geographers have the tools needed to make significant contributions to place
attachment. We have an innate interest in understanding places, we seek to under-
stand how people interact with places, and our discipline has always been one
to approach scholarship from a holistic approach. Instead of approaching place
attachment from the perspective of three distinct components (person, place, or
process), geographers can help scholars in other disciplines see that a holistic
approach might be more fruitful. This would put PLACE back in place attach-
ment research because we would be seeking to understand how people, places,
and processes all work together.

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Introduction
Agnew, J. A. 1987. Place and Politics: The Geographical Mediation of State and Society.
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