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Articles

Growing dens. On re-grounding the child–nature relationship through a new materialist approach to children’s dens

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Pages 279-291 | Received 03 Feb 2017, Accepted 05 Dec 2017, Published online: 16 Jan 2018
 

ABSTRACT

This paper contributes to the dawning disruption of the prevailing notion of the child–nature relationship through a new materialist reading of children’s dens, and proffers a re-grounded and worldly gaze on the relationship with implications for the promotion of children’s outdoor lives. The study is an ethnographical field study among 10–12-year-old boys in a Danish school. Data were generated through participant observation, and include video recordings and photographs of children’s dens. Drawing on a flat ontology and plugging in key Ingoldian concepts of meshwork and growing (Ingold 2011a, 2013), the analysis suggests that children’s relations to dens cut across taken-for-granted subject–object binaries and go beyond common notions of nature as inert materials. I find that dens are growing in an ever-becoming meshwork comprised by human and non-human intra-actions, and that agency or vitality can be ascribed broadly to the material world. Possible implications for planning are considered.

Acknowledgements

I would like to acknowledge the children who engaged in project by inviting me into their everyday lives during the course of the study. Also, I would like to thank a number of colleagues, including my supervisors Søren Andkjær, Helle Johannesen and Simon Beames for critical and supportive comments. Moreover, I would like to thank Mette Lezuik Hansen for persistent support with proofreading the manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Nordea-fonden under Grant number 02-2014-0387, and The Danish Outdoor Counsil under Grant number 102288.

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