References
- Barkan, L. (1975). Nature’s work of art: the human body as image of the world, New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Barrell, J., & Bull, J. (1974). The penguin book of English pastoral verse, London: Allen Lane.
- Brown, G. (2009). Herdwicks: Herdwick sheep and the English district, South Stainmore, Kirkby Stephen, Cumbria: Hayloft.
- Cosgrove, D. (1993). The Palladian landscape, University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
- Council of Europe. (2000). European Landscape Convention, Florence. CETS No. 176. Strasbourg: Author.
- Cregan, K. (2007). Early modern anatomy and the queen’s body natural: The sovereign subject. Body & Society, 13(2), 47–66.
- Cronon, W. (1996). Uncommon ground: Rethinking the human place in nature. (W. Cronon, ed), New York: W.W. Norton.
- Curtius, E. R. (1953). European literature and the Latin middle ages, London: Kegan Paul.
- England, N. (2008). State of the natural environment 2008 (NE85), Sheffield: Natural England.
- Evans, E. E. (1958a). Anonymous summary of: “The Atlantic ends of Europe”. Nature (Supplement), 182(4635), 581–582.
- Evans, E. E. (1958b). The Atlantic Ends of Europe. The Advancement of Science XV: 54–64.
- Eversley, L. (1910). Commons, forests and footpaths, London: Cassell.
- Falk, H., & Torp, A. (1996 (1903–1906)). Etymologisk ordbog over det norske og det danske sprog, Oslo: Bjørn Ringstrøms Antikvariat.
- Foucault, M. (2007). Security, territory, population, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Fox, S. C. (1952). The Personality of Britain. Cardif, National Museum of Wales.
- Gray, J. (1999). Open space and dwelling places: being at home on hill farms in the Scottish borders. American Ethnologist, 26(2), 440–460.
- Hastrup, K. (1985). Culture and history in medieval Iceland: An anthropological analysis of structure and change, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Kantorowicz, E. H. (1957). The king’s two bodies: A study in mediaeval political theology, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Karieva, P., & Marvier, M. (2011). Conservation science: Balancing the needs of people and nature. Greenwood Village: Roberts & Company.
- Kerrigan, J. (2008). Archipelagic English: Literature, history, and politics 1603–1707, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Lear, L. (2007). Beatrix Potter: The extraordinary life of a Victorian genius, London: Penguin.
- McKenna, K. (2016). “The National Trust, the sheep farm and the fight for a Lakes way of life.” The Guardian, Sunday 4 September. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/sep/03/national-trust-lake-district-borrowdale-sheep-farm-sale-fight
- Merriam-Webster. (1994). Collegiate dictionary and thesaurus, Springfield, MA.: Author.
- NOAD. (2005). New Oxford American Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- O.D.S. (1931). Ordbog over det danske sprog, Copenhagen: Gyldendal.
- Olwig, K. R. (2002). Landscape, nature and the body politic, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
- Olwig, K. R. (2004). “This is not a landscape”: Circulating reference and land shaping. In European rural landscapes: Persistence and change in a globalising environment ( H. Palang et. al, eds. pp. 41–66). Dordrecht: Kluwer.
- Olwig, K. R. (2005). The landscape of ‘customary’ law versus that of ‘natural’ law. Landscape Research, 30(3), 299–320.
- Olwig, K. R. (2006). Place contra space in a morally just landscape. Norwegian Journal of Geography, 60(1), 24–31.
- Olwig, K. R. (2007). Are islanders insular? a personal view. Geographical Review, 97(2), 175–190.
- Olwig, K. R. (2013). Heidegger, Latour and the reification of things: The inversion and spatial enclosure of the substantive landscape of things – The Lake District case. Geografiska Annaler, Series B: Human Geography, 95(3), 251–273.
- Olwig, K. R. (2016). Virtual enclosure, ecosystem services, landscape’s character and the ‘rewilding’ of the commons: the ‘Lake District” case. Landscape Research, 41(2), 253–264.
- Olwig, K. R. (2017). Geese, elves and the duplicitous, ‘diabolical’ landscaped space of reactionary-modernism. GeoHumanities, 3(1), 41–64.
- Ostrom, E. (1990). Governing the commons: The evolution of institutions for collective action, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Rawnsley, H. D. (1911a). By fell and dale at the English lakes, Glasgow: James MacLehose.
- Rawnsley, H. D. (1911b). A crack about herdwick sheep. By fell and dale at the English Lakes (pp. 47–72), Glasgow: MacLehose.
- Rebanks, J. (2016). The shepherd’s life: A tale of the lake district, London: Penguin Books.
- Rodgers, C. P., Straughton, E., Winchester, A. J., Pieraccini, M. (2011). Contested common land: environmental governance past and present, London: Earthscan.
- Scottish National Dictionary (1960). Edinburgh, The Scottish National Dictionary Association.
- Thompson, I. (2012). The English lakes: A history, Bloomsbury: London.
- UNESCO. (2017). “English Lake District welcomed into UK UNESCO family as 31st UK World Heritage Site.” from https://www.unesco.org.uk/news/english-lake-district-welcomed-into-uk-unesco-family-as-31st-uk-world-heritage-site/.
- Vinterberg, H., & Bodelsen, C. A. (1966). Dansk-engelsk ordbog. Copenhagen: Gyldendal.
- Walton, J. K. (2011). “Cumbrian Identities: Some Historical Contexts.” Trans. of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society 3rd Series XI: 15–27.
- Webster, B., & Burgess, K. (2015). “Walkers fear six-mile fence will spoil the Lake District”. The Times. London, Times Newspapers, February 23, p. 3.
- Wordsworth, W. (2004) (orig. 1810)). Guide to the lakes. London: Francis Lincoln.