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Dark Skies addresses a significant gap in knowledge in relation to perspectives from the arts, humanities and social sciences. In providing a new multi- and interdisciplinary field of inquiry, this book brings together engagements with dark skies from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds.
Nick Dunn is Professor of Urban Design and Executive Director of Imagination, the design and architecture research lab at Lancaster University, UK. He is founding Director of the Dark Design Lab, exploring the impacts of nocturnal activity on humans and non-humans. Nick is a Director of DarkSky UK, promoting more sustainable relationships between the built environment and the night, as well as exploring ways to promote wider and inclusive participation with dark skies. He is the author of Dark Matters: A Manifesto for the Nocturnal City (2016) and co-editor of Rethinking Darkness: Cultures, Histories, Practices (2020). Nick is a keen nightwalker, has curated exhibitions, and given invited talks at both literature and science festivals. Tim Edensor is Professor of Social and Cultural Geography at the Institute of Place Management, Manchester Metropolitan University. He is the author of Tourists at the Taj (1998), National Identity, Popular Culture and Everyday Life (2002), Industrial Ruins: Space, Aesthetics and Materiality (2005), From Light to Dark: Daylight, Illumination and Gloom (2017) and Stone: Stories of Urban Materiality (2020). He is the editor of Geographies of Rhythm (2010), and co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of Place (2020), Rethinking Darkness: Cultures, Histories, Practices (2020) and Weather: Spaces, Mobilities and Affects (2020). His most recent book, about a Scottish medieval cross, is Landscape, Materiality and Heritage: An Object Biography (2022).
Part One: Introduction Dark skies: meanings, challenges and relationships Tim Edensor and Nick Dunn Part Two: Creative engagements with dark places Creative approaches to dark skies research: a dialogue between two artist-researchers Natalie Marr and Helen McGhie Dark skies in southern Scotland and northern England: border-crossing sites for creative experiment and envisioning connectedness Ysanne Holt The Transparency of Night Louise Beer Part Three: Sensing dark landscapes Nightfalling: Dancing in the dark as an artistic practice Ellen Jeffrey Sensing Dark Places: Creating thick descriptions of nocturnal time and rhythm Rupert Griffiths, Nick Dunn and Elisabeth de Bezenac Considering festive Illuminations in Dark Sky places: honouring darkness, creative innovation and place Tim Edensor and Dan Oakley Part Four: Non-human entanglements with dark skies Nature's calendar, clock and compass: what happens when it's disrupted? Theresa Jones and Marty Lockett Preserving Darkness in the Wildwood Kimberly Dill Darkening Cities as Urban Restoration Taylor Stone Part Five: Dark sky communities Designing with the Dark Kerem Asfuroglu Who is afraid under dark skies? Four female experts about 'spaces of fear', astronomy and the loss of the night Nona Schulte-Romer What do we mean by "dark skies"? Yee-Man Lam Part Six: Dark sky tourism Tread Softly in the Dark Georgia MacMillan, Hannah Dalgleish, Therese Conway and Marie Mahon Nocturnal (Dark) Anthropology: Spotlight on an Ancient Indian Civilization Neha Khetrapal Beauty Won't Save the Starry Night: Astro-Tourism and the Astronomical Sublime Dwayne C. Avery Part Seven: Conclusion Under the night: values and futures of dark skies Nick Dunn and Tim Edensor