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Performance Research
A Journal of the Performing Arts
Volume 15, 2010 - Issue 4: Fieldworks
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Original Articles

Mapping the Field: Moving through landscape

Pages 86-96 | Published online: 10 Dec 2010
 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

1 Research for this article has been undertaken as part of the project ‘Mapping Performance Culture: Nottingham 1857–1867’, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and undertaken at the University of Nottingham in collaboration with Dr Gary Priestnall from the School of Geography as co-investigator. Other members of the project team were Dr Lucie Sutherland (English), Dr Robin Burgess (Geography) and Dr Richard Tyler-Jones (Information Services), and we have been aided considerably by Nottingham City Libraries and Museums and the Nottinghamshire County Archive. My thanks to them and to Julie Sanders, James Moran and Steve Daniels for comments on earlier drafts of this article.

Each year the AHRC provides funding from the Government to support research and postgraduate study in the arts and humanities, from archaeology and English literature to design and dance. Only applications of the highest quality and excellence are funded and the range of research supported by this investment of public funds not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. For further information on the AHRC, please see www.ahrc.ac.uk.

Notes

2 Such a map would eventually resemble that life-sized one of Jorge Luis Borges in his story, ‘Of Exactitude in Science’ (1933), which weathered and tore across the terrain it represented.

3 The ‘Henry Pelham Clinton, Duke of Newcastle K.G. and Lord Lieutenant of the County’ referred to here is the man responsible for the development of Nottingham Park, prominent to the west of the town centre on this Salmon map.

4 The ‘Panoramic Lecture of the “Heroic Life and Career of Garibaldi”’ is a rare example of a complete surviving moving panorama which, together with its accompanying script, has been digitized by Brown University Library Center for Digital Initiatives as part of the ‘Garibaldi and the Risorgimento’ project. To see the Garibaldi panorama, and to read the script, go to http://dl.lib.brown.edu/garibaldi/panorama.php.

5 Dr Lucie Sutherland, post-doctoral researcher on the Mapping the Moment project, has written on the activities of the Robin Hood Rifles: see ‘Mapping the Robin Hood Rifles in mid-nineteenth-century Nottingham’, forthcoming.

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