
Contents
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Shaping Public Space Shaping Public Space
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A Crisis of Place? A Crisis of Place?
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Place and Belonging Place and Belonging
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Place and Commitment Place and Commitment
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Place and Social Crisis Place and Social Crisis
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Place, Belonging, and Commitment Place, Belonging, and Commitment
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Place and Memory Place and Memory
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The Sacred and Place The Sacred and Place
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The Function of Sacred Space The Function of Sacred Space
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Is Sacred Space Important? Is Sacred Space Important?
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What Counts as Sacred Space Today? What Counts as Sacred Space Today?
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The City as Sacred Space The City as Sacred Space
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Place and Christian Theology Place and Christian Theology
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Conclusion: The Good City Conclusion: The Good City
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3 A Sense of Place
Get accessProfessor, Senior Fellow & Research Director
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Published:August 2024
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Abstract
A “sense of place” embraces the important value of rootedness and having a sense of identity and belonging. The vital question is who truly belongs in a place? Thomas Merton’s provocative essay “The Street is for Celebration” contrasts those who genuinely inhabit a place and those who are merely “dumped” and have to fight for recognition. “Place” obviously has a physical dimension but a deep “sense of place” also relates to being truly present and committed to a place. Being truly “placed” counters the privatization of public space which prioritizes commercial interests over what will benefit the whole community. A “sense of place” should no longer be limited to “the local” but should embrace a wider world and be just, beautiful, open-minded, ecological, humane, and diverse.
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