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The air's got to be far cleaner here: A discursive analysis of place‐identity threat
Author(s) -
HughJones Siobhan,
Madill Anna
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
british journal of social psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 2044-8309
pISSN - 0144-6665
DOI - 10.1348/014466608x390256
Subject(s) - identity (music) , locale (computer software) , place identity , place attachment , context (archaeology) , sociology , residence , social psychology , interview , psychology , aesthetics , geography , engineering , philosophy , civil engineering , demography , archaeology , anthropology , urban planning , computer science , operating system
That talk is never disinterested complicates the relationship between the environment and the claims people make about it. Talk about place, and one's self in it, is particularly complex when the environment poses risk or is otherwise problematized. This study, a secondary analysis of interview data, seeks to extend discursive work on place‐identity by examining the ways in which 14 residents of a small English village talk about themselves and their locale. The locale accommodates an active quarry, and many residents had lodged complaints to the quarry about dust, noise and vibrations from blasting. Attention to the interactional context of the interviews illustrates the ways in which (simply) interviewing people about their locale can threaten self‐ and place‐identity. When asked about life in the village, interviewees oriented to two main dilemmas in protecting self‐ and place‐identity: (1) how to justify continued residence in a challenging environment and (2) how to complain about the locale whilst maintaining positive place‐identity. Discursive responses to these dilemmas drew upon typical identity processes, such as self‐ and place distinctiveness and the formulation of out‐groups, as well as upon constructions of localized power‐sharing and morally obligated tolerance of risk. We suggest that research on problematical places, and of environmental risk, needs to be sensitized to how it may constitute a threat to self‐ and place‐identity, and how this may mediate formulations self and place, as well as of environmental risk.

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