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Vol. 30, No. 1, Winter/Spring 2019 (Besides “conferences,” “items of interest,” and “citations received,” this EAP issue includes the following entries: an “in memoriam” for geographer David Lowenthal, an early figure in environmental phenomenology, who died in London in September; a “book note” on architect and architectural theorist Hendrik Auret’s Christian Norberg-Schulz’s Interpretation of Heidegger’s Philosophy (Routledge, 2018); a “book note” on philosopher Edward Casey’s The World on Edge (Indiana University Press, 2017); the second part of the late philosopher Henri Bortoft’s 1999 conference presentation on Goethean science; Anthropologist Jenny Quillien’s reflections upon her recent experiences of living in Amsterdam as they point toward the significance of language in contributing to places and lifeworlds; Colorado speedskater David Feric’s account of his firsthand experience of the sport as a starting point for a phenomenology of speedskating; Artist and art educator Doris Rohr’s consideration of the work of British artist and art critic John Ruskin as a conceptual and methodological means to facilitate a style of seeing and drawing that maintains sympathetic contact with the thing looked at and represented.

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Environmental & Architectural Phenomenology Vol. 30, No. 1
Kansas State University. Architecture Department