People of 'Black' African ancestry's perceptions of the English landscape, through the lens of the Peak District National ParkTools Ayamba, Maxwell Apaladaga (2025) People of 'Black' African ancestry's perceptions of the English landscape, through the lens of the Peak District National Park. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThis thesis explores the racialised aspects of English landscape representations of ‘Black’ bodies through the lived experiences of people of ‘Black’ African ancestry in two English cities (Sheffield and Derby) through the lens of the Peak District National Park, Britain’s first National Park created in 1951 as part of the post-war reforms. It considers how appearances of ‘Black’ bodies in the English landscape influences perceptions of some white people’s own racialised identities of those considered as ‘Others’ as not belonging in the English countryside. This study emerged from autoethnography and readings of literatures that suggest ‘Black’ and other racialised subjects are excluded from the English landscape such as National Parks. ‘Black’ and other racialised subjects remain underrepresented in English National Parks’ history, with histories of ‘Black’ people erased from the English landscape culminating in the present-day lack of their sense of belonging in these spaces. This erasure is deeply rooted in the historisation and constructions of the English landscape as a ‘white space’, impacting on the way ‘Black’ people are perceived or feel perceived in National Parks.
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