Discovering a Sense of Place

A seven-session discussion guide focusing on knowing and protecting our place.

In this course, participants will:

  • Understand the meaning of a bioregional perspective, and what it would mean to develop one.
  • Consider the benefits of consciously developing an intimate relationship with your place.
  • Explore what it might mean to protect the place where you live.

 

“Of all the memberships we identify ourselves by the one thing that is most forgotten, and that has the greatest potential for healing, is place. We must learn to know, love, and join our place even more than we love our own ideas. People who can agree that they share a commitment to the landscape/cityscape — even if they are otherwise locked in struggle with each other — have at least one deep thing to share.” - Gary Snyder

If you are interested in starting this discussion course in your community, download the Discovering A Sense of Place Course Flyer here.

Topics

A Sense of Place
Wendell Berry, America’s best-known bioregionalist, says if you don’t know where you are, you don’t know who you are. With a sense of place, your identity is defined—to a significant extent—by the natural features of the place where you live. Without a sense of place, what will fill the void?

Responsibility to Place
There is a difference between living on the land and dwelling in it—understanding its rhythms, its potential, and its limits. Those who develop intimacy with a place over time tend to accept responsibility for it.

Knowing Your Bioregion
Your bioregion is a unique place with its own watershed, soils, climate, plants, animals, and history. How much do you know about it?

Living in Place
Living in place means consciously trying to satisfy your needs and find your pleasures in your local bioregion and working to assure the long-term health of the bioregion.

Mapping Your Place
Mapping can be learned by local groups and individuals to give a new sense of place. Whereas a typical map shows political subdivisions and transportation routes, a bioregionalist’s map delineates regions based on watersheds, climate, and plant types, thereby helping people relate to their natural surroundings.

Building Local Community
A bioregionalist assumes responsibility for the health and continuity of a place, not only its natural features, but also the social bonds of its people.

Empowerment
Knowing a place can inspire and empower one to take action to preserve it or take part in its restoration. How important is individual and group action in modern society?

Readings

“Living Where You Live” by Hannah Holmes
“The Sense of Place” by Wallace Stegner
“Everybody’s Ditch” by Robert Pyle
“The Spirit of Place” by Wade Davis
“In Praise of Hometowns” by Mary Pipher
“My Empty Lot” by Joseph Kastner
“The Land Ethic” by Aldo Leopold
“Rediscovery of North America” by Barry Lopez
“Homeplace” by Scott Russell Sanders
“Notes on Living Simply in the City” by Marilyn Welker
“Initiation” by Tom Jay
“Where Currents Merge” by Steve Johnson
“Valley of Long Grasses” by Peter Boag
“Sauvie Island” by Florence Riddle
“Geology of Portland” by Marshall Gannett
“The Politics of Place” by Daniel Coleman
“Speaking for Douglas Fir” by Gary Snyder
“Crafting Nativeness” by Jeff Bickhart
 “Gardening at the Seam” by Judith Larner Lowry
“There’s No Specialization like Home” by John Bullard
“Reweaving Our Soul Connection with Food” by Paul Conrad
“Mapping the Biosphere” by Gene Marshall
“Mapping the Sacred Places” by Jan DeBlieu
“Raise the Gates!” by Sabrina Merlo
“The Web of Life” by Scott Russell Sanders
“Home is Other People” by Mary Pipher
“A Watershed Runs Through You” by Freeman House
“Community-Based Restoration” by Christine Schneider
“A Green Architect Falls in Love… with FrogSong Cohousing”
“Help Groups” by Steve Whitson
“Making a Difference” by Katrina Shields
“The Power of One” by Sharif Abdullah
“Making the Connection” by Susan Cerulean
“Push for Change” by Ann Sihler
“Facts About Geese” by Angeles Arrien