Few things are more unpredictable than the convergence of people, landscape and memory. Often, the more time that passes, the more memory has to lean upon imagination to define experiences from the ever-receding past. “The present”, notes Ian Jack, “always depends upon the past, which makes the past a necessary subject of any reporter’s enquiry” (Jack 2009: xiii). When the reporter is also a poet, however, the enquiry of which Jack speaks assumes a different character, different imperatives. The following essay considers Batmans Hill, South Staffs, 1961-1972, my themed sequence of poems, a return to the human and non-human landscapes of my childhood. One concern of the sequence is how locality defined people and people humanised locality in...
Tim Wright‘s 2004 creative memory project, In Search of Oldton, is concerned with a need to reconcil...
A ‘drowned’ or flooded village describes the destruction of a settlement or community to make way fo...
Interest in derelict, underused and neglected (DUN) sites has grown in recent years in both the aca...
Abstract. Few things are more unpredictable than the convergence of people, landscape and memory. Of...
Abstract: Remembering, in some senses, is an act of reparation. What is it, then, to recount by name...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
In 2012 I received research funding from Southampton Solent University to investigate the text of Gr...
This article adds to current debates on the nature of English identity through examining some of wha...
AcceptedArticle in PressThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Geographical Society of Ireland via the DOI...
This book chapter investigates the ways in which place and mobility have become major concerns for g...
© 2017 Landscape Research Group Ltd. The literary map of the Peak District is surprisingly thin. Thi...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
In the spring of 1818 John Keats journeyed to Teignmouth in Devon to care for his dying brother. Th...
In this article we discuss our creative research on and with a contested coastal community on one of...
Tim Wright‘s 2004 creative memory project, In Search of Oldton, is concerned with a need to reconcil...
A ‘drowned’ or flooded village describes the destruction of a settlement or community to make way fo...
Interest in derelict, underused and neglected (DUN) sites has grown in recent years in both the aca...
Abstract. Few things are more unpredictable than the convergence of people, landscape and memory. Of...
Abstract: Remembering, in some senses, is an act of reparation. What is it, then, to recount by name...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
In 2012 I received research funding from Southampton Solent University to investigate the text of Gr...
This article adds to current debates on the nature of English identity through examining some of wha...
AcceptedArticle in PressThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Geographical Society of Ireland via the DOI...
This book chapter investigates the ways in which place and mobility have become major concerns for g...
© 2017 Landscape Research Group Ltd. The literary map of the Peak District is surprisingly thin. Thi...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
In the spring of 1818 John Keats journeyed to Teignmouth in Devon to care for his dying brother. Th...
In this article we discuss our creative research on and with a contested coastal community on one of...
Tim Wright‘s 2004 creative memory project, In Search of Oldton, is concerned with a need to reconcil...
A ‘drowned’ or flooded village describes the destruction of a settlement or community to make way fo...
Interest in derelict, underused and neglected (DUN) sites has grown in recent years in both the aca...