{"title":"激进的休息和娱乐及其空间排列","authors":"Elaine Stratford","doi":"10.1111/1745-5871.12589","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In December 2022, the team at <i>Geographical Research</i>—including members of the Institute of Australian Geographers and staff from Wiley—came together in celebration of 60 years in the life of the journal. Held online, the short event enabled us to launch an editorial pick of 10 years’ of work on geography published between Volumes 51 and 60, and those are now available online here. It was a lovely occasion and provided an opportunity to show what is a newly refreshed look for the journal.</p><p>And then many of us went through that mad period of days or weeks before what is often a collective break at the year’s end so that we could ‘down tools’ for a period of time. A necessity? Absolutely, but also something not to be taken for granted given how many people throughout the world work with little rest and limited labour protection.</p><p>I always take more time than I’d like to wind down, and it interests me that many of the strategies I use to do so are <i>spatial</i> in character—at least they seem so to me, but then I feel as though I am permanently enmeshed in a geographically inflected ontology.</p><p>So, for example, I make certain that every last ‘species’ of work that might have crept out of the home office into the rest of the house is rounded up and gently enclosed back in that office, and the door is then shut for the duration. I turn off all notifications and ‘park’ them in cyber space after setting up out-of-office messages that I hope give comfort to those who are still submitting work to the journal in the team’s short absence.</p><p>And then …</p><p>And then I garden with an enthusiasm and focus that is soothing—therapeutic even—and that provides immediate gratification and connection to the elements and the more-than-human. I read light-hearted works with a mix of voraciousness and languor and then, when the temptation to nap becomes too compelling, I ‘map’ the inside of my eyelids. I reintroduce myself to forms of food preparation and cooking that engender ease and slow pace. And I mooch with friends over coffee or I simply sit in the garden and work to embody the verb <i>be</i> rather than <i>do</i>.</p><p>Rest is not, I think, a way of being that many of us are especially adept at, and I would certainly place myself in those ranks. I struggle to stop and am always and inevitably deeply grateful that I have. Rest enables recreation of the sorts I describe above and, equally and perhaps as or more importantly, gives space for recreation … processes to nourish, revitalise, rethink, gauge anew, and consciously or unconsciously ponder with a view to bring fresh perspectives and energy to life’s works when the rest is done.</p><p>Often, of course, there is a sense that the down-time was never quite enough … but my break is now over, and a new year has beckoned and with it a new volume of four issues of this journal and a new set of webinars, conference offerings, and social media communications. And, as ever, our offerings are a team effort involving many people from the core editorial team to the editorial board, our Council, publisher, and authors and readers.</p><p>So here’s to 2023 and the community that gathers around the ‘pages’ of this journal. This year, we have decided to lead each issue with a commentary by one of our associate editors—and the inaugural offering is from Patrick Moss and focuses on Australian peatlands and gaps in research about them, which should surely be seen as an enticing invitation to readers to consider how to address those opportunities for new research. We then include Steve Turton’s (<span>2022</span>) Festschrift in honour of Distinguished Professor Jamie Kirkpatrick, which is also available online here.</p><p>Four original articles follow Steve’s contribution: serendipitously, three are about mining and its challenges in South Africa (Sesele & Marais, <span>2023</span>), Ghana (Afriyie et al., <span>2023</span>), and the Philippines (Ocampo & Schmitz, <span>2023</span>). The last is a comparative analysis of Buddhist and Taoist sacred mountains in China and, like the others, but for very different reasons, I found it fascinating (Qiu et al., <span>2023</span>).</p><p>Continuing our Covid commentaries, we have two additional papers by An et al. (<span>2023</span>) and by Burton and Harwood (<span>2023</span>). And I am pleased to note that, in coming weeks, we will be launching a virtual issue of those commentaries published between 2020 and 2022 and have already received several new submissions for the second round of papers on a post-Covid world and hope that many of those will be available in coming months.</p><p>Thereafter, we present a special section on island methodologies and geographies comprising a guest editorial by McMahon and Baldacchino (<span>2023</span>) and five papers on decolonising methodologies (Farbotko et al., <span>2023</span>), islandness and art (Brinklow, <span>2023</span>), island settings’ influences on methodologies (Agius, <span>2023</span>), connectivity conservation strategies on islands (Kirkpatrick, <span>2023</span>), and insider perspectives on island research (Teasdale & Teasdale, <span>2023</span>).</p><p>The issue is rounded out by a thoughtful review by Warman (<span>2023</span>) of Rachael Wakefield-Rann’s new book <i>Life Indoors</i> by Russell Warman, and, sadly, we note the passing of Emeritus Professor Joseph Powell (Rimmer, <span>2023</span>), whose influence on generations of us remains.</p><p>I warmly recommend this issue to you.</p>","PeriodicalId":47233,"journal":{"name":"Geographical Research","volume":"61 1","pages":"4-5"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12589","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Radical rest and recreation and their spatial permutations\",\"authors\":\"Elaine Stratford\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1745-5871.12589\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>In December 2022, the team at <i>Geographical Research</i>—including members of the Institute of Australian Geographers and staff from Wiley—came together in celebration of 60 years in the life of the journal. Held online, the short event enabled us to launch an editorial pick of 10 years’ of work on geography published between Volumes 51 and 60, and those are now available online here. It was a lovely occasion and provided an opportunity to show what is a newly refreshed look for the journal.</p><p>And then many of us went through that mad period of days or weeks before what is often a collective break at the year’s end so that we could ‘down tools’ for a period of time. A necessity? Absolutely, but also something not to be taken for granted given how many people throughout the world work with little rest and limited labour protection.</p><p>I always take more time than I’d like to wind down, and it interests me that many of the strategies I use to do so are <i>spatial</i> in character—at least they seem so to me, but then I feel as though I am permanently enmeshed in a geographically inflected ontology.</p><p>So, for example, I make certain that every last ‘species’ of work that might have crept out of the home office into the rest of the house is rounded up and gently enclosed back in that office, and the door is then shut for the duration. I turn off all notifications and ‘park’ them in cyber space after setting up out-of-office messages that I hope give comfort to those who are still submitting work to the journal in the team’s short absence.</p><p>And then …</p><p>And then I garden with an enthusiasm and focus that is soothing—therapeutic even—and that provides immediate gratification and connection to the elements and the more-than-human. I read light-hearted works with a mix of voraciousness and languor and then, when the temptation to nap becomes too compelling, I ‘map’ the inside of my eyelids. I reintroduce myself to forms of food preparation and cooking that engender ease and slow pace. And I mooch with friends over coffee or I simply sit in the garden and work to embody the verb <i>be</i> rather than <i>do</i>.</p><p>Rest is not, I think, a way of being that many of us are especially adept at, and I would certainly place myself in those ranks. I struggle to stop and am always and inevitably deeply grateful that I have. Rest enables recreation of the sorts I describe above and, equally and perhaps as or more importantly, gives space for recreation … processes to nourish, revitalise, rethink, gauge anew, and consciously or unconsciously ponder with a view to bring fresh perspectives and energy to life’s works when the rest is done.</p><p>Often, of course, there is a sense that the down-time was never quite enough … but my break is now over, and a new year has beckoned and with it a new volume of four issues of this journal and a new set of webinars, conference offerings, and social media communications. And, as ever, our offerings are a team effort involving many people from the core editorial team to the editorial board, our Council, publisher, and authors and readers.</p><p>So here’s to 2023 and the community that gathers around the ‘pages’ of this journal. This year, we have decided to lead each issue with a commentary by one of our associate editors—and the inaugural offering is from Patrick Moss and focuses on Australian peatlands and gaps in research about them, which should surely be seen as an enticing invitation to readers to consider how to address those opportunities for new research. We then include Steve Turton’s (<span>2022</span>) Festschrift in honour of Distinguished Professor Jamie Kirkpatrick, which is also available online here.</p><p>Four original articles follow Steve’s contribution: serendipitously, three are about mining and its challenges in South Africa (Sesele & Marais, <span>2023</span>), Ghana (Afriyie et al., <span>2023</span>), and the Philippines (Ocampo & Schmitz, <span>2023</span>). The last is a comparative analysis of Buddhist and Taoist sacred mountains in China and, like the others, but for very different reasons, I found it fascinating (Qiu et al., <span>2023</span>).</p><p>Continuing our Covid commentaries, we have two additional papers by An et al. (<span>2023</span>) and by Burton and Harwood (<span>2023</span>). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
2022年12月,《地理研究》的团队——包括澳大利亚地理学家研究所的成员和威利大学的工作人员——聚在一起庆祝该杂志创刊60周年。在网上举行的这个简短的活动使我们能够发布一份10年来出版的第51卷至第60卷之间的地理工作的编辑精选,现在可以在这里在线阅读。这是一个可爱的场合,并提供了一个机会来展示什么是一个新的面貌,为杂志。然后,我们中的许多人都经历了几天或几周的疯狂时期,然后通常在年底集体休息,这样我们就可以“放下工具”一段时间。必需的吗?当然,但考虑到世界上有多少人工作很少休息,劳动保护有限,这也不是理所当然的。我总是花费比我想要的更多的时间来放松,而且让我感兴趣的是,我用来这样做的许多策略都是空间性质的——至少对我来说是这样的,但然后我觉得我好像永远陷入了一个地理变化的本体中。例如,我会确保每一种可能从家庭办公室悄悄溜到家里其他地方的工作都被收集起来,轻轻地封闭在那个办公室里,然后在此期间把门关上。在设置了“不在办公室”的信息后,我关闭了所有的通知,并将它们“停放”在网络空间中,我希望这些信息能给那些在团队短暂离开期间仍在向期刊提交工作的人带来安慰。然后……然后我带着热情和专注去园艺,这是一种安慰——甚至是治疗——这提供了即时的满足,并与大自然和超越人类的事物建立了联系。我带着贪婪和倦怠的心情阅读轻松的作品,然后,当小睡的诱惑变得太强烈时,我就会在眼皮里“绘制”。我重新把自己介绍给各种形式的食物准备和烹饪,它们带来了轻松和缓慢的节奏。我和朋友一起喝咖啡,或者只是坐在花园里,努力体现动词“是”而不是“做”。我认为,休息并不是我们许多人特别擅长的一种方式,我当然会把自己放在这一行列中。我努力想要停下来,我总是并且不可避免地深深地感激我曾经拥有的。休息可以实现我上面描述的各种娱乐,同样,也许更重要的是,它为娱乐提供了空间……在休息结束后,滋养、恢复活力、重新思考、重新衡量、有意识或无意识地思考,以期为生活的工作带来新的视角和能量。当然,经常会有一种感觉,休息时间永远不够……但我的休息时间现在结束了,新的一年已经到来,伴随着新的四期杂志和一系列新的网络研讨会,会议产品和社交媒体交流。而且,一如既往,我们的产品是一个团队的努力,涉及许多人,从核心编辑团队到编辑委员会,我们的理事会,出版商,作者和读者。所以,为2023年和聚集在这本杂志“页面”周围的社区干杯。今年,我们决定每期以一位副主编的评论作为开头——第一篇文章由帕特里克·莫斯(Patrick Moss)撰写,重点关注澳大利亚泥炭地及其研究中的差距,这无疑是对读者的一个诱人的邀请,让他们考虑如何抓住这些新研究的机会。然后,我们收录了史蒂夫·特顿(2022年)的《纪念杰出教授杰米·柯克帕特里克》(Festschrift),这本书也可以在网上找到。四篇原创文章遵循史蒂夫的贡献:偶然地,三篇是关于南非的采矿业及其挑战(Sesele &Marais, 2023),加纳(Afriyie et al., 2023)和菲律宾(Ocampo &施密茨,2023)。最后是对中国佛教和道教神山的比较分析,和其他神山一样,但由于非常不同的原因,我觉得它很迷人(Qiu et al., 2023)。继续我们对Covid的评论,我们还有An等人(2023年)和Burton和Harwood(2023年)的另外两篇论文。我很高兴地指出,在未来几周内,我们将推出一份关于2020年至2022年期间发表的评论的虚拟刊物,并且已经收到了关于后covid世界的第二轮论文的几份新提交文件,并希望其中许多将在未来几个月内提供。此后,我们提出了一个关于岛屿方法论和地理学的特别部分,其中包括McMahon和Baldacchino(2023)的客座社论和五篇关于非殖民化方法论的论文(Farbotko等人,2023),岛屿性和艺术(Brinklow, 2023),岛屿环境对方法论的影响(Agius, 2023),岛屿上的连性保护策略(Kirkpatrick, 2023),以及岛屿研究的内部观点(Teasdale &蒂斯代尔,2023)。
Radical rest and recreation and their spatial permutations
In December 2022, the team at Geographical Research—including members of the Institute of Australian Geographers and staff from Wiley—came together in celebration of 60 years in the life of the journal. Held online, the short event enabled us to launch an editorial pick of 10 years’ of work on geography published between Volumes 51 and 60, and those are now available online here. It was a lovely occasion and provided an opportunity to show what is a newly refreshed look for the journal.
And then many of us went through that mad period of days or weeks before what is often a collective break at the year’s end so that we could ‘down tools’ for a period of time. A necessity? Absolutely, but also something not to be taken for granted given how many people throughout the world work with little rest and limited labour protection.
I always take more time than I’d like to wind down, and it interests me that many of the strategies I use to do so are spatial in character—at least they seem so to me, but then I feel as though I am permanently enmeshed in a geographically inflected ontology.
So, for example, I make certain that every last ‘species’ of work that might have crept out of the home office into the rest of the house is rounded up and gently enclosed back in that office, and the door is then shut for the duration. I turn off all notifications and ‘park’ them in cyber space after setting up out-of-office messages that I hope give comfort to those who are still submitting work to the journal in the team’s short absence.
And then …
And then I garden with an enthusiasm and focus that is soothing—therapeutic even—and that provides immediate gratification and connection to the elements and the more-than-human. I read light-hearted works with a mix of voraciousness and languor and then, when the temptation to nap becomes too compelling, I ‘map’ the inside of my eyelids. I reintroduce myself to forms of food preparation and cooking that engender ease and slow pace. And I mooch with friends over coffee or I simply sit in the garden and work to embody the verb be rather than do.
Rest is not, I think, a way of being that many of us are especially adept at, and I would certainly place myself in those ranks. I struggle to stop and am always and inevitably deeply grateful that I have. Rest enables recreation of the sorts I describe above and, equally and perhaps as or more importantly, gives space for recreation … processes to nourish, revitalise, rethink, gauge anew, and consciously or unconsciously ponder with a view to bring fresh perspectives and energy to life’s works when the rest is done.
Often, of course, there is a sense that the down-time was never quite enough … but my break is now over, and a new year has beckoned and with it a new volume of four issues of this journal and a new set of webinars, conference offerings, and social media communications. And, as ever, our offerings are a team effort involving many people from the core editorial team to the editorial board, our Council, publisher, and authors and readers.
So here’s to 2023 and the community that gathers around the ‘pages’ of this journal. This year, we have decided to lead each issue with a commentary by one of our associate editors—and the inaugural offering is from Patrick Moss and focuses on Australian peatlands and gaps in research about them, which should surely be seen as an enticing invitation to readers to consider how to address those opportunities for new research. We then include Steve Turton’s (2022) Festschrift in honour of Distinguished Professor Jamie Kirkpatrick, which is also available online here.
Four original articles follow Steve’s contribution: serendipitously, three are about mining and its challenges in South Africa (Sesele & Marais, 2023), Ghana (Afriyie et al., 2023), and the Philippines (Ocampo & Schmitz, 2023). The last is a comparative analysis of Buddhist and Taoist sacred mountains in China and, like the others, but for very different reasons, I found it fascinating (Qiu et al., 2023).
Continuing our Covid commentaries, we have two additional papers by An et al. (2023) and by Burton and Harwood (2023). And I am pleased to note that, in coming weeks, we will be launching a virtual issue of those commentaries published between 2020 and 2022 and have already received several new submissions for the second round of papers on a post-Covid world and hope that many of those will be available in coming months.
Thereafter, we present a special section on island methodologies and geographies comprising a guest editorial by McMahon and Baldacchino (2023) and five papers on decolonising methodologies (Farbotko et al., 2023), islandness and art (Brinklow, 2023), island settings’ influences on methodologies (Agius, 2023), connectivity conservation strategies on islands (Kirkpatrick, 2023), and insider perspectives on island research (Teasdale & Teasdale, 2023).
The issue is rounded out by a thoughtful review by Warman (2023) of Rachael Wakefield-Rann’s new book Life Indoors by Russell Warman, and, sadly, we note the passing of Emeritus Professor Joseph Powell (Rimmer, 2023), whose influence on generations of us remains.