Environmental & Architectural Phenomenology

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/2097/1522

Published three times a year, Environmental and Architectural Phenomenology (EAP) is a forum and clearing house for research and design that incorporate a qualitative approach to environmental and architectural experience. One key concern of EAP is design, education, and policy supporting and enhancing natural and built environments that are beautiful, alive, and humane. Realizing that a clear conceptual stance is integral to informed research and design, the editors emphasize phenomenological approaches but also cover other styles of qualitative research.

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Now showing 1 - 20 of 96
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 34, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 34, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 33, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 33, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 32, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
    Besides “Items of interest,” and “citations received,” this issue includes the following items: Zoologist Stephen Wood’s commentary relating to the phenomenology of animal welfare; Environmental psychologist Claudia Mausner discussion of liminality, place, home, and multiple “homes”; Architect Tim White’s firsthand examination of the human-sustaining walkability of Florence, Italy; Geographer Edward Relph’s overview of the future of places and place experiences in the 21st century; Architect Levent Şentürk’s effort to summarize graphically the work of urban designer Kevin Lynch’s seminal The Image of the City (1961).
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 31, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2020) Seamon, David
    Besides “Place and COVID-19,” “Items of interest,” and “citations received,” this issue includes the following items: An “in memoriam” for architect and sacred geometer Keith Critchlow, who died in London in April; A “book note” on philosopher Dermot Moran’s study, Husserl’s Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology (2010); A “book note” on philosopher Ingrid Leman Stefanovic’s The Wonder of Water (2020), an edited collection examining how human experience relates to decisions about water; Torontonian Robert Fabian’s update on downtown neighborhood planning in his city (“A New Urban Place”); Philosopher John Russon’s exploration of the lived ambiguity of travelling to a foreign place (“The Border at the Heart of Human Life”); Independent researcher Stephen Wood’s discussion of two contrasting modes of science teaching—what he calls “knowledge-based learning” vs. “understanding-based learning” (“An Understanding-Grounded Approach to Science Education”)’; Science educator Henri Bortoft’s explication of Goethe’s proto-phenomenology of nature as one example of a science of wholeness (originally published as four separate essays in the last four EAP issues and now integrated into one) (“Seeing and Understanding Holistically: Goethean Science and the Wholeness of Nature”).
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 31, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2020) Seamon, David
    Besides “items of interest,” and “citations received,” this issue includes the following items: An “in memoriam” for architectural theorist Bill Hillier, who died in November; Entries relating to Goethean science as a phenomenology of nature, including three “book notes” on recently-published volumes as well as the last part of philosopher Henri Bortoft’s essay, “Goethean Science and the Wholeness of Nature;” A “book note” on sociologist Michael Hviid Jacobsen’s Encountering the Everyday: An Introduction to the Sociology of the Unnoticed. Essays by writer David Ferlic (“Walking the Dog Phenomenologically”) and anthropologist Kevin Browne (“Negotiating National Memory and Forgetting through Cemeteries”); Psychologist Akihiro Yoshida’s Japanese translation of the “twenty-three definitions of phenomenology,” originally published in the 2019 summer/fall issue of EAP.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Cumulative Index (Volumes 1-30, 1990-2019)
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2019) Seamon, David
    This index includes all EAP entries except reference items listed in “citations received.” Entries have been identified in the following order: volume number, issue number, and page(s). Thus 3,2:10, for example, refers to volume 3, issue 2, page 10. Volume numbers by years are as follows: vol. 1—1990; vol. 2—1991; vol. 3—1992; vol. 4—1993; vol. 5—1994; vol. 6—1995; vol. 7—1996; vol. 8—1997; vol. 9—1998; vol. 10—1999; vol. 11—2000; vol. 12—2001; vol. 13—2002; vol. 14—2003; vol. 15—2004; vol. 16—2005; vol. 17—2006; vol. 18—2007; vol. 19—2008; vol. 20—2009; vol. 21—2010; vol. 22—2011; vol. 23—2012; vol. 24—2013; vol. 25—2014; vol. 26—2015; vol. 27—2016; vol. 28—2017; vol. 29—2018; vol. 30—2019. The index categories are: feature essays; thematic issues, book and film reviews; book notes; bibliographies; course outlines; poetry; noteworthy readings; graduate theses; web sites; news from readers; conferences; organizations; refereed journals; book series; other publications; obituaries; topics.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 30, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2019) Seamon, David
    Vol. 30, No. 2, Summer/Fall 2019. Besides “items of interest,” and “citations received,” this issue includes the following items: An “in memoriam” for phenomenological sociologist George Psathas, who died last November; “Book notes” on philosopher Dan Zahavi’s Phenomenology: The Basics; and naturalist Paul Krafel’s Roaming Upward; The third part of the late philosopher Henri Bortoft’s 1999 conference presentation on Goethean science; Sociologist Julia Bennett’s overview of her doctoral research relating to belonging among families who have lived in one English town for multiple generations; Environmental educator John Cameron’s continuing discussion of “lived interiority” via consideration of landscape character as understood by several well-known thinkers and writers; Australian artist and photograph Sue Michael’s introductory text and several works that were part of her recent painting and photography exhibit, “Settled Areas”; To mark EAP’s 30th year of publication, editor David Seamon’s discussion of current conceptual and methodological concerns relating to phenomenology as a philosophy and research approach; The issue ends with 23 definitions of phenomenology written by eminent phenomenological thinkers.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 30, Number 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2018-12-01) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 29, Number 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 29, Number 1
    (Kansas State University. Department of Architecture) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 28, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 28, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 27, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 27, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 26, issue 3
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 26, issue 2
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 26, issue 1
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2015-01-23) Seamon, David
  • ItemOpen Access
    Environmental & architectural phenomenology. Vol. 25, issue 3
    (Kansas State University. Architecture Department, 2014-10-06) Seamon, David