Wither Genius Loci?: The City, Urban Fabric and Identity in Perth, Western Australia
- By Felicity Morel Edniebrown1
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View Affiliations Hide Affiliations1 Department of Humanities, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Department of Planning, Perth, Western, Australia
- Source: The Role of Place Identity in the Perception, Understanding, and Design of Built Environments , pp 209-227
- Publication Date: July 2012
- Language: English
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In the face of global interconnectivity where homogenization of culture is endemic, what price individuality and sense of the authentic? While commercial corporate identity is rampant, showing the same branding in Prague as in Pittsburgh, where stands the differentiated meaning of cities and what creates their sense of individuality? This paper will argue that a sustainable and culturally enriched engagement with place primarily comes from understanding the context of the place — its history, its layered meanings and the contexts that individuals draw from their understandings of their physical environment, mediated by their past experience. It will propose that ‘sense of place’ (‘genius loci’) is the physical manifestation of authenticity and outline a simple model for understanding authenticity. It will draw upon examples from Perth, Western Australia to show how the topography and interpretation of the city’s historical connection to water still is a defining factor for city development and how memories of the built environment in the inner city have strongly influenced residents’ sense of place and, by extension, their sense of self.
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