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Semiotic Field of the Garden: Personal Culture and Collective Culture [Minkštas viršelis]

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This book is not only a direct study of gardens, but also an exploration of the relationship between personal and collective culture, an important component of cultural psychology. This perspective leads to the strange but fascinating question: "How does gardening relate to human development?"

Exploring the meaning of garden for a human being offers profound insights on the relationship between personal and collective culture. In the process of constructing of a garden, nature becomes the object, on which various liminal, aesthetic, and symbolic activities are directly performed. The term garden encompasses a multitude of meanings. It is a place for recreation as well as a symbol of social status and prosperity. For the gardener, it is a place of work. Feelings aroused by a garden are deeply rooted in peoples hearts and have an aesthetic significance. Throughout the book, readers will be awakened to how deeply the garden is connected to the human psyche.

This book will be of interest to scholars and students of cultural psychology, as well as to anyone interested in the relationship between people and gardens (gardeners, architects, artists, farmers). Readers are encouraged to look back at their own experiences to deepen their understanding of personal and collective culture. Imagine the garden you are familiar with, be it a home garden, neighborhood park, cemetery, or schoolyard. You may find that facets of your experiences are reflected in the colorful and diverse gardens featured in this book.
Series Editors PrefaceCultivating Gardens: Dialogues Within the Self;
Jaan Valsiner.

Editorial IntroductionExpanding the Concept of the Garden: From Japanese Zen
Gardens to Human Development; Teppei Tsuchimoto.

Part I: Gardens With Human Life.

Chapter
1. The Garden as a Symbolic Space: Trajectories of Affective-Semiotic
Cultivation; Daniela Schmitz Wortmeyer.

Chapter
2. Garden as a Sign of Happiness; Ramon Cerqueira Gomes.

Chapter
3. Mirrors of a Garden: Understanding Ecological Units Over Time;
Enno Freiherr von Fircks and Marc Antoine Campill.

Chapter
4. I Need a Garden, a Survivor Said: A Garden as a Place Where
Survivors Become Relational Beings for Disaster Recovery; Ryohei Miyamae.

Chapter
5. Radioactive Waste Publicly Placed in a Space That Used to be a
Yard as a Private Place: Time and Sign in the Designated Evacuation Areas
After Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Accident; Tomoo Hidaka and Hideaki
Kasuga.

Chapter
6. Commentary Part IAMultilayered and Complex Issue of Garden;
Eemeli Hakoköngäs.

Chapter
7. Commentary Part IBCommentary to the Garden: A Place to Cultivate
in Pain and Comfort; Marc Antoine Campill.

Part II: Garden Metaphor: Exploring Personal < > Collective Culture.

Chapter
8. From God's Garden to Garden of Memories: Personal and Collective
Cultures in a Northern Finland Cemetery; Eemeli Hakoköngäs.

Chapter
9. The Humanistic Garden of the Renaissance: Where Human, Society and
Cosmos Meet: An Introduction to Machiavelli's Political Ideas. Line
Joranger.

Chapter
11. Constant Fear of Ostracism; Miho Zlazli.

Chapter
12. Djinns and Radioactive Materials: An Abductive Autoethnography on
a Garden of Invisible Entities; Yusuke Katsura.

Chapter
13. The Transition of a Beginning Nursery Teacher's Interaction With
Children From a Garden Perspective; Kiyoshi Hamana.

Chapter
14. Commentary Part IIAGarden as an Expression of Human Life; Ramon
Cerqueira Gomes.

Chapter
15. Commentary Part IIBEnriching the Semiotic Field of the Garden
Through Metaphors; Enno von Fircks.

Part III: Moving Through Gardens: A Journey To Self-cultivation.

Chapter
16. Cultivation in Self and Environment: When a Voice Echoes From One
Garden to Another; Marc Antoine Campill.

Chapter
17. Moving Through Racial Gardens: Personal and Collective Dimensions
of Racial Becoming: A Transcultural Autoethnographic Account; Mįrcio de
Abreu.

Chapter
18. Life in a Different Soil: My Existential Mobility as an
Immigrant; Rennan Okawa.

Chapter
19. Chinese-Born Korean People's Experience and Present-Day Japan:
Using TEA; Akiko Ichikawa.

Chapter
20. Qualia of Transgender Experiences: What Visual Images Tells Us;
Naoto Machida.

Chapter
21. Commentary Part IIIASelf-Cultivation: The Process of Finding
Space for Oneself and Others; Line Joranger.

Chapter
22. Commentary Part IIIBThe Garden as a Metaphor for Cultivation of
the Self and the Other; Daniela Schmitz Wortmeyer.

Part IV: The Garden Project The Garden Project: Initiating International
Cultural Exchange Through Gardens; Teppei Tsuchimoto, Yuki Saito, Misato
Furuse, And Tatsuya Sato.

Chapter
23. The Inner Sanctum as a Garden of Buddha and the People Who Take
Care of It: How the Priest's Eldest Son Discovered the Garden; Gishin
Tsukuba.

Chapter
24. Analysis of Personal Culture Appearing in the Japanese Garden;
Megumi Nishikawa.

Chapter
25. Personal Feeling Toward Three Gardens in My Life: Example of the
Yu Garden; Xiaoxue Chen.

Chapter
26. Garden as Infinity; Fumiyuki Taka.

Chapter
27. Commentary Part IV: Reflecting on Oneself and Garden: Projecting
Happy Memories Into the Future; Tatsuya Sato.

Epilogue: Living With Gardening; Living as Gardening, Teppei Tsuchimoto.