As noted in the call for this year’s papers, “Sense of place has become a buzzword used
to justify everything from a warm fuzzy appreciation of a natural landscape to the selling of
homesites in urban sprawl. The truth is we probably have no single “sense of place;” instead, we
bring to the places we live a whole set of cultural preconceptions that shape the way we respond
to the place, and in some measure reshape the place to fit those preconceptions….” This lack of
a common definition or understanding of sense of place, results both from the fact that it has
become a buzzword used to suit various purposes, and from the interdisciplinary nature of the
concept. To provide a little background for the use of the term, I will review some of the
definitions used by various social scientists, and then review my own contribution to that
literature by summarizing and expanding on a few of the ideas presented at last year’s
Headwaters Conference.