Synopsis
To be human is to experience fear, but what is it exactly that makes us fearful? Here is one geographer’s striking exploration of our landscapes of fear as they change throughout our lives and have changed throughout history. Yi-fu Tuan investigates landscapes of the natural environment which are threatening, and landscapes filled with the dark imageries of the mind; fears of drought, flood, famine, and disease, shared by all members of a community, and fears of the particular ghosts which haunt the individual imagination.
In this lucidly-written, ground-breaking survey, Professor Tuan delves into many cultures and reaches back into our prehistory to discover what is universal and what is particular in our inheritance of fear. Starting with fear in animals, he raises and explores a variety of questions: What is specifically human about fear? Is there or has there ever been a “fearless” society?
Professor Tuan examines the most specific forms fear takes in the mind of the child, among hunters and agriculturists, inside the walls of a medieval Chinese city, among Navaho Indians and American immigrants. He explores the ways in which authorities create landscapes of terror to instill fear in their own populations; and he probes that most basic of all contradictions between the need for human security and the fear of human nature. Professor Tuan particularly emphasizes how, in coping with fears of enemies, strangers, the insane, wolves, wind, witches, mountains, dragons, rain, or the terror that the universe itself might crumble, humans respond adventurously by creating “shelters,” ranging from fairy tales to cosmological myths. We watch as human beings continually draw and redraw their “circles of safety,” never feeling entirely at peace within them.
About Yi-Fu Tuan
Yi-fu Tuan was born in Tientsin, China, in 1930. He is a professor of geography at the University of Minnesota, and has been a visiting professor at Oxford University, the University of Hawaii, and the University of California at Davis. He has written for numerous magazines and received many awards in his field. His two most recent books are
Topophilia and
Space and Place.
Praise
“A thoroughly original and delightful, broad-ranging examination of the variegated Landscapes of Fear. Illuminating and beguiling.”
—Ashley Montagu
“This book confirms my regard for Yi-fu Tuan’s erudition, his literary style, and his humane philosophy. Landscapes of Fear reveals a new and valuable approach to the study of the relationship between man and the environment: a historical-psychological approach which will undoubtedly stimulate much fresh speculation.”
—John B. Jackson
“In a most learned and entertaining way, Yi-fu Tuan demonstrates that The Age of Anxiety and The Age of Uncertainty have always been with us. Throughout history, all kinds of dangers have created countless Landscapes of Fear in which humankind has managed to find happiness.”
—René Dubos