What is a Liminal Journeys: 11-1-22
Finding Wilderness depicts that if we all tried to live in the woods or the wilderness, it would not be the same, it would disappear and that the wilderness functions as a liminal space. A liminal space or journey comes from a latin root which means the threshold or the in between. In class we discussed how Anthropologists have looked at this in terms of ritual or going towards rights of passage and that being considered a liminal journey. An example from class also is how an individual moves from childhood to adulthood and a ritual may occur which can be known as the liminal stage. Dr. Redick believes that if we see the wilderness in terms as a liminal journey, perhaps individuals could be in the wilderness without it disappearing. In comparison, when an individual is liminal, they are unable to grasp a hold of identity, and they are able to open themselves to others with an alternative meaning present. Dr. Redick distinguishes between going on a backpacking trip and being a survivalist in nature. The underlying and differentiating distinction is that a survivalist journey evolves into a utilitarian experience where an individual must find shelter, find food, and think about what the forest can provide them. Whereas, a liminal journey is an individual opening themselves up to more than just their expectations from their environment. Finding Wilderness explores how nature seeks self-interest and is in a state that pits us against each other.
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