An Ecofeminist Narrative of Urban Nature Connection |
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Authors: | Bryan S. R. Grimwood |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Recreation and Leisure Studies, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canadabgrimwood@uwaterloo.ca |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThe purpose of this study was to explore meanings, experiences, and perceived impacts associated with an urban nature connection program as narrated by mothers of program participants. “Project Connect”, a charity organization established in 2008, delivers the program investigated in urban parks and green spaces in Toronto, Canada. Drawing on ecofeminism and narrative inquiry, the study reveals a community narrative that depicts how Project Connect serves a group of mothers as an incubator of relationships spanning social and environmental domains, and which enable resistance of status quo forces that shape contemporary cityscapes. Nature connection in this sense is very much a political and cultural process that opens opportunities to challenge but also reproduce aspects of the dominant nature-related discourses. Accordingly, this study prompts consideration of the power of mothers and an ethics of care to transform human-nature relationships, and weaves critical consciousness and cautious re-valuing around the nature narratives we tell. |
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Keywords: | ecofeminism narratives nature connection outdoor leisure and learning women's leisure |
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