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'''Kenneth Robert Olwig''' (b. 1946) is an American-born landscape geographer, specializing in the study of the Scandinavian landscape. He is best known for his work on the conceptual understanding of landscape, and for advocating a "substantive" and integrated rather than critical approach to landscape. Olwig's books include ''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'' (2002) and ''Nature's Ideological Landscape'' (1984).
+
'''Kenneth Robert Olwig''' (b. 1946) is an American-born landscape geographer, specializing in the study of the Scandinavian landscape. He is best known for advocating a "substantive" approach to landscape, one that incorporates legal and other lived significances of landscape. His writings include ''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'' (2002) and ''Nature's Ideological Landscape'' (1984).
   
Olwig is a professor of landscape architecture at the [[wikipedia:Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences|Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences]] in Lund, Sweden, which he joined in 2002. He commutes to the university from Copenhagen, Denmark.<ref name="lrg"/>
+
Olwig is a professor of landscape architecture at the [[wikipedia:Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences|Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences]] in Lund, Sweden, where he joined the faculty in 2002.<ref name="cv"/> He commutes to the university from Copenhagen, Denmark.<ref name="lrg"/>
   
 
==Early life and education==
 
==Early life and education==
  +
{{Quote box|width=250px|Though she died at the time of my birth, my grandmother's Swedish presence was still felt in the meatballs my mother made. However, when asked I preferred to say I was Danish, like my mother's father, to avoid problems with the Norwegians. It didn't hurt, of course, that the name Olwig is Norwegian in origin.<br/>&mdash;Kenneth Olwig{{sfn|Olwig|2003|pp=211-212}} }}
   
Olwig grew up in [[Staten Island, New York]].<ref name="lrg">{{Cite web|url=http://www.landscaperesearch.org/about/lrg-directors/kenneth-olwig/|publisher=Landscape Research Group|title=Kenneth Olwig|author=Kenneth Olwig|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref> He left high school early to attend [[Shimer College]], which for more than 50 years has offered an [[Early_entrance_at_Shimer_College|early entrance program]] for talented high schoolers ready to enter college early.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.shimer.edu/academicprograms/undergraduate/earlyentrantprogram.cfm|title=Early Entrant Program|publisher=Shimer College|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref> He did a junior year abroad in Denmark,<ref name="lrg"/> and graduated in 1967.
+
Olwig grew up in a Scandinavian neighborhood of [[Staten Island, New York]].<ref name="lrg">{{Cite web|url=http://www.landscaperesearch.org/about/lrg-directors/kenneth-olwig/|publisher=Landscape Research Group|title=Kenneth Olwig|author=Kenneth Olwig|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref>{{sfn|Olwig|2003|p=211}} His father was sports editor for the ''[[wikipedia:Staten Island Advance|Staten Island Advance]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.shimer.edu/alumninetwork/RodSuch.cfm|title=Rod Such|publisher=Shimer College|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref>
   
  +
Olwig left high school early to attend [[Shimer College]], which for more than 50 years has offered an [[Early_entrance_at_Shimer_College|early entrance program]] for talented high schoolers ready to enter college early.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.shimer.edu/academicprograms/undergraduate/earlyentrantprogram.cfm|title=Early Entrant Program|publisher=Shimer College|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref> He did a junior year abroad in Denmark, which he has credited with initiating him into "the core issues of Nordic identity",{{sfn|Olwig|2003|p=212}} and graduated in 1967.<ref name="cv">{{Cite web|url=http://www.slu.se/Documents/externwebben/ltj-fak-dok/landskapsarkitektur/Personal/Olwig-1.pdf|title=Kenneth R. Olwig: Calendar 2012, Research Projects, CV, Publications|author=Kenneth Olwig|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref>
For graduate school, Olwig attended the [[wikipedia:University of Minnesota|University of Minnesota]], where he completed a master's degree in Scandinavian "language, literature, history and geography" in 1971. For his doctorate, he transferred to the geography department, where his advisor was [[wikipedia:Yi-Fu Tuan|Yi-Fu Tuan]].<ref name="slu">{{Cite web|url=http://www.slu.se/kenneth_olwig_eng|title=Kenneth Olwig|publisher=Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref> He completed his doctorate in 1977;<ref name="slu"/> his dissertation was titled "The morphology of a symbolic landscape : a geosophical case study of the transformation of Denmark's Jutland heaths circa 1750-1950."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldcat.org/title/morphology-of-a-symbolic-landscape-a-geosophical-case-study-of-the-transformation-of-denmarks-jutland-heaths-circa-1750-1950/oclc/4079419&referer=brief_results|title=|work=Worldcat|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref>
 
  +
  +
For graduate school, Olwig attended the [[wikipedia:University of Minnesota|University of Minnesota]], where he completed a master's degree in Scandinavian "language, literature, history and geography" in 1971. Olwig has characterized the subject of his master's degree as "Scandinavian philology,"<ref name="lrg"/> and philological inquiry has remained a staple of his writing.
  +
 
For his doctorate, Olwig transferred to the geography department, where his advisor was [[wikipedia:Yi-Fu Tuan|Yi-Fu Tuan]].<ref name="slu">{{Cite web|url=http://www.slu.se/kenneth_olwig_eng|title=Kenneth Olwig|publisher=Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref> He completed his doctorate in 1977;<ref name="slu"/> his dissertation was titled "The morphology of a symbolic landscape : a geosophical case study of the transformation of Denmark's Jutland heaths circa 1750-1950."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldcat.org/title/morphology-of-a-symbolic-landscape-a-geosophical-case-study-of-the-transformation-of-denmarks-jutland-heaths-circa-1750-1950/oclc/4079419&referer=brief_results|title=The morphology of a symbolic landscape: a geosophical case study of the transformation of Denmark's Jutland heaths circa 1750-1950|work=Worldcat|accessdate=2013-06-13}}</ref>
   
 
==Academic and research career==
 
==Academic and research career==
   
From 1993 to 1996, Olwig worked at the Man and Nature Humanities Research Center at [[wikipedia:Odense University|Odense University]] in Denmark, as a senior research fellow.<ref name="slu"/> He later taught at the [[wikipedia:Norwegian University of Science and Technology|University of Trondheim]] in Norway.<ref name="slu"/>
+
From 1979 to 1983, Olwig worked in the department of landscape at the Danish Pedagogical University (DPU), now part of [[wikipedia:Aarhus University|Aarhus University]]. From 1986 on, he has been formally on the faculty of the DPU, with periodic lengthy leaves of absence.<ref name="cv"/>
  +
  +
In 1984, Olwig published the influential ''Nature's Ideological Landscape'', with an introduction by Yi-Fu Tuan. The book, an abridged version of Olwig's dissertation,<ref name="cv"/> was likened by environmental historian Alix Cooper to earlier works in environmental history by [[wikipedia:William Cronon|William Cronon]] and [[wikipedia:Roderick Nash|Roderick Nash]].<ref>http://envhis.oxfordjournals.org/content/8/4/691.extract</ref>
  +
  +
From 1993 to 1996, Olwig worked at the Man and Nature Humanities Research Center at [[wikipedia:Odense University|Odense University]] in Denmark, as a senior research fellow.<ref name="slu"/> He later also taught at the [[wikipedia:Norwegian University of Science and Technology|University of Trondheim]] in Norway.<ref name="slu"/>
  +
  +
In 1996, Olwig published an influential paper on "Recovering the Substantive Nature of Landscape", using his favored philological form of inquiry.{{sfn|Olwig|1996}} In it, Olwig used the roots of the Germanic cognates of "landscape" to push back against the more aesthetic understanding of the term that had come to dominate in the literature.<ref name="matless">{{Cite book|author=David Matless|year=2003|title=Handbook of Cultural Geography|section=Section 4: Landscape|chapter=Introduction|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=TSWruHZUOr4C&pg=PA230|page=230|isbn=076196925X|publisher=SAGE Publishing|editors=Kay Anderson et al.}}</ref> Observing that “a ''landskab'' was not just a region, it was a nexus of law and cultural identity”, {{sfn|Olwig|1996|p=633}} Olwig argued that for contemporary geographers it is similarly “not enough to study landscape as a scenic text.”{{sfn|Olwig|1996|p=645}} Drawing especially on the legal significance of landscape, Olwig pressed for a "substantive" approach to landscape, which he defined in this way:
  +
<blockquote> By substantive, I mean "real rather than apparent" and "belonging to the substance of a thing," but also the legal sense of "creating and defining rights and duties" (Merriam-Webster 1961: substantive). In this context, I am also concerned with landscape as a "real" phenomenon in the sense that the "real" relates "to things in law," especially "fixed, permanent, or immovable things (lands tenements)" (Merriam-Webster 1961: real).{{sfn|Olwig|1996|p=646n1}}</blockquote>
  +
  +
The paper produced a lively debate between Olwig and backers of mainstream [[wikipedia:cultural geography|cultural geography]] such as [[wikipedia:Denis Cosgrove|Denis Cosgrove]].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Social Formation and Symbolic Landscape|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NrD2-nJ52aYC&pg=PR27|page=27|year=1998|author=Denis Cosgrove|isbn=0299155145}}</ref> Olwig's arguments have become a key part of the discourse on landscape within cultural geography, and are engaged with in many reviews of this field.<ref name="matless"/>
  +
<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies|editors=Dan Hicks & Mary C. Beaudry|chapter=Ecological Landscapes|authors=Sarah Whatmore & Steve Hinchliffe|page=441|isbn=0199218714|year=2010|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=soqnmu9-rnMC&pg=PA441}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=The SAGE Handbook of Geographical Knowledge|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Fhv5rlZ29IsC&pg=PA310|editors=John A. Agnew & David N. Livingstone|year=2011|pages=309-310|chapter=Landscape|author=John Wylie|isbn=1446209547}}</ref>
   
Olwig's ''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'' (2002) was assessed by [[wikipedia:Denis Cosgrove|Denis Cosgrove]] as "by far the most sustained conceptual interrogation of landscape to appear in the past two decades."{{sfn|Cosgrove|2003|p=136}}
+
Olwig's second book, ''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'', was published by University of Wisconsin Press in 2002; like its predecessor, it bore an introduction by Olwig's mentor Yi-Fu Tuan. The book was reviewed in at least six different journals, covering fields from cultural geography to environmental history.<ref>http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/11044728/landscape-nature-body-politic-from-britains-renaissance-americas-new-world-book</ref> It was assessed by Denis Cosgrove as "by far the most sustained conceptual interrogation of landscape to appear in the past two decades."{{sfn|Cosgrove|2003|p=136}} Cosgrove also, however, challenged the excessively smooth intellectual transitions in the sweeping work, pointedly likening the book to "an English Georgian estate landscape: easy progression, gentle transitions, rounded hills and vales without sudden breaks or sharp disruptions."{{sfn|Cosgrove|2003|p=137}}
   
  +
The cover design for ''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'', which adapts part of the original cover of Hobbes' ''Leviathan'', drew particular attention for highlighting the little-noticed role of landscape in that historically famous image.{{sfn|Cosgrove|2003|p=136}}
In January 2002, Olwig joined the faculty of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, teaching landscape theory and history.<ref name="slu"/>
 
   
  +
In January 2002, Olwig joined the faculty of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, teaching landscape theory and history, and commuting to Sweden from his home in Copenhagen.<ref name="slu"/> Olwig became a director of the [[Landscape Research Group]] in 2005.<ref name="lrg"/> Since 2006, he has served as editor of several edited volumes on landscape geography, including '' Justice, Power and the Political Landscape '' (2007).
Olwig became a director of the [[Landscape Research Group]] in 2005.<ref name="lrg"/>
 
   
==Works==
+
==Books==
 
*''Nature's Ideological Landscape'' (1984)
 
*''Nature's Ideological Landscape'' (1984)
 
*''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'' (2002)
 
*''Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic'' (2002)
*''The nature of cultural heritage and the culture of natural heritage : northern perspectives on a contested patrimony'' (2006, coeditor)
+
*''The Nature of Cultural Heritage and the Culture of Natural Heritage: Northern perspectives on a contested patrimony'' (2006, coeditor)
*'' Justice, power and the political landscape '' (2007, coeditor)
+
*'' Justice, Power and the Political Landscape '' (2007, coeditor)
*'' Nordic landscapes : region and belonging on the northern edge of Europe '' (2008, coeditor)
+
*'' Nordic Landscapes : region and belonging on the northern edge of Europe '' (2008, coeditor)
   
 
==Works cited==
 
==Works cited==
 
*{{Cite journal|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/30033895|page=136|title=''Landscape, Nature, and the Body Politic: From Britain's Renaissance to America's New World'' by Kenneth Olwig|first=Denis|last=Cosgrove|journal=Geographical Review|volume=93|issue=1|year=2003|pages=136-138|ref=harv}}
 
*{{Cite journal|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/30033895|page=136|title=''Landscape, Nature, and the Body Politic: From Britain's Renaissance to America's New World'' by Kenneth Olwig|first=Denis|last=Cosgrove|journal=Geographical Review|volume=93|issue=1|year=2003|pages=136-138|ref=harv}}
  +
*{{Cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=XxYxiXolJrUC&pg=PA211|pages=211-232|year=2003|title=Voices from the North: New Trends in Nordic Human Geography|editors=Jan Ohman & Kirsten Simonson|first=Kenneth|last=Olwig|isbn=0754634256|ref=harv|chapter=In search of the Nordic landscape: A personal view}}
  +
*{{Cite journal|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/2564345|title=Recovering the Substantive Nature of Landscape|first=Kenneth R.|last=Olwig|journal=Annals of the Association of American Geographers|volume=86|issue=4|year=1996|pages=630-653|ref=harv}}
   
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 00:23, 15 June 2013

brief descriptionprofilesbiographyreferences
Kenneth Olwig

Full name

Kenneth Robert Olwig

Alternative names

Kenneth R. Olwig, K.R. Olwig

Presence at Shimer

1967

Presence on Earth

1946–

BA

Shimer College 1967

MA

University of Minnesota 1971

Ph.D.

University of Minnesota 1977

Role(s)

Mount Carroll period alum

Kenneth Olwig was a student at Shimer College during the Mount Carroll period, graduating in 1967.


Profiled[]

Brief description[]

This brief description is released under the CC0 copyright waiver.

Kenneth Robert Olwig (b. 1946) is an American landscape geographer specializing in the study of the Scandinavian landscape. Since 2002, he has served as professor of landscape architecture at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. He is best known for his work on the conceptual understanding of landscape, and for advocating a "substantive" and integrated rather than critical approach to landscape. Olwig's books include Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic (2002) and Nature's Ideological Landscape (1984). Olwig received his bachelor's degree from Shimer College, where he enrolled through the early entrance program, and obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota, where he studied under the noted geographer Yi-Fu Tuan. (from Shimer College Wiki)

Biography[]


Note: Part or all of this article is being groomed for possible export to Wikipedia.


Kenneth Robert Olwig (b. 1946) is an American-born landscape geographer, specializing in the study of the Scandinavian landscape. He is best known for advocating a "substantive" approach to landscape, one that incorporates legal and other lived significances of landscape. His writings include Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic (2002) and Nature's Ideological Landscape (1984).

Olwig is a professor of landscape architecture at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Lund, Sweden, where he joined the faculty in 2002.[1] He commutes to the university from Copenhagen, Denmark.[2]

Early life and education[]

Though she died at the time of my birth, my grandmother's Swedish presence was still felt in the meatballs my mother made. However, when asked I preferred to say I was Danish, like my mother's father, to avoid problems with the Norwegians. It didn't hurt, of course, that the name Olwig is Norwegian in origin.
—Kenneth Olwig[3]

Olwig grew up in a Scandinavian neighborhood of Staten Island, New York.[2][4] His father was sports editor for the Staten Island Advance.[5]

Olwig left high school early to attend Shimer College, which for more than 50 years has offered an early entrance program for talented high schoolers ready to enter college early.[6] He did a junior year abroad in Denmark, which he has credited with initiating him into "the core issues of Nordic identity",[7] and graduated in 1967.[1]

For graduate school, Olwig attended the University of Minnesota, where he completed a master's degree in Scandinavian "language, literature, history and geography" in 1971. Olwig has characterized the subject of his master's degree as "Scandinavian philology,"[2] and philological inquiry has remained a staple of his writing.

For his doctorate, Olwig transferred to the geography department, where his advisor was Yi-Fu Tuan.[8] He completed his doctorate in 1977;[8] his dissertation was titled "The morphology of a symbolic landscape : a geosophical case study of the transformation of Denmark's Jutland heaths circa 1750-1950."[9]

Academic and research career[]

From 1979 to 1983, Olwig worked in the department of landscape at the Danish Pedagogical University (DPU), now part of Aarhus University. From 1986 on, he has been formally on the faculty of the DPU, with periodic lengthy leaves of absence.[1]

In 1984, Olwig published the influential Nature's Ideological Landscape, with an introduction by Yi-Fu Tuan. The book, an abridged version of Olwig's dissertation,[1] was likened by environmental historian Alix Cooper to earlier works in environmental history by William Cronon and Roderick Nash.[10]

From 1993 to 1996, Olwig worked at the Man and Nature Humanities Research Center at Odense University in Denmark, as a senior research fellow.[8] He later also taught at the University of Trondheim in Norway.[8]

In 1996, Olwig published an influential paper on "Recovering the Substantive Nature of Landscape", using his favored philological form of inquiry.[11] In it, Olwig used the roots of the Germanic cognates of "landscape" to push back against the more aesthetic understanding of the term that had come to dominate in the literature.[12] Observing that “a landskab was not just a region, it was a nexus of law and cultural identity”, [13] Olwig argued that for contemporary geographers it is similarly “not enough to study landscape as a scenic text.”[14] Drawing especially on the legal significance of landscape, Olwig pressed for a "substantive" approach to landscape, which he defined in this way:

By substantive, I mean "real rather than apparent" and "belonging to the substance of a thing," but also the legal sense of "creating and defining rights and duties" (Merriam-Webster 1961: substantive). In this context, I am also concerned with landscape as a "real" phenomenon in the sense that the "real" relates "to things in law," especially "fixed, permanent, or immovable things (lands tenements)" (Merriam-Webster 1961: real).[15]

The paper produced a lively debate between Olwig and backers of mainstream cultural geography such as Denis Cosgrove.[16] Olwig's arguments have become a key part of the discourse on landscape within cultural geography, and are engaged with in many reviews of this field.[12] [17][18]

Olwig's second book, Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic, was published by University of Wisconsin Press in 2002; like its predecessor, it bore an introduction by Olwig's mentor Yi-Fu Tuan. The book was reviewed in at least six different journals, covering fields from cultural geography to environmental history.[19] It was assessed by Denis Cosgrove as "by far the most sustained conceptual interrogation of landscape to appear in the past two decades."[20] Cosgrove also, however, challenged the excessively smooth intellectual transitions in the sweeping work, pointedly likening the book to "an English Georgian estate landscape: easy progression, gentle transitions, rounded hills and vales without sudden breaks or sharp disruptions."[21]

The cover design for Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic, which adapts part of the original cover of Hobbes' Leviathan, drew particular attention for highlighting the little-noticed role of landscape in that historically famous image.[20]

In January 2002, Olwig joined the faculty of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, teaching landscape theory and history, and commuting to Sweden from his home in Copenhagen.[8] Olwig became a director of the Landscape Research Group in 2005.[2] Since 2006, he has served as editor of several edited volumes on landscape geography, including Justice, Power and the Political Landscape (2007).

Books[]

  • Nature's Ideological Landscape (1984)
  • Landscape, Nature and the Body Politic (2002)
  • The Nature of Cultural Heritage and the Culture of Natural Heritage: Northern perspectives on a contested patrimony (2006, coeditor)
  • Justice, Power and the Political Landscape (2007, coeditor)
  • Nordic Landscapes : region and belonging on the northern edge of Europe (2008, coeditor)

Works cited[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Kenneth Olwig. "Kenneth R. Olwig: Calendar 2012, Research Projects, CV, Publications". http://www.slu.se/Documents/externwebben/ltj-fak-dok/landskapsarkitektur/Personal/Olwig-1.pdf. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Kenneth Olwig. "Kenneth Olwig". Landscape Research Group. http://www.landscaperesearch.org/about/lrg-directors/kenneth-olwig/. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  3. Olwig 2003, pp. 211-212.
  4. Olwig 2003, p. 211.
  5. "Rod Such". Shimer College. http://www.shimer.edu/alumninetwork/RodSuch.cfm. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  6. "Early Entrant Program". Shimer College. http://www.shimer.edu/academicprograms/undergraduate/earlyentrantprogram.cfm. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  7. Olwig 2003, p. 212.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 "Kenneth Olwig". Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. http://www.slu.se/kenneth_olwig_eng. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  9. "The morphology of a symbolic landscape: a geosophical case study of the transformation of Denmark's Jutland heaths circa 1750-1950". Worldcat. http://www.worldcat.org/title/morphology-of-a-symbolic-landscape-a-geosophical-case-study-of-the-transformation-of-denmarks-jutland-heaths-circa-1750-1950/oclc/4079419&referer=brief_results. Retrieved 2013-06-13. 
  10. http://envhis.oxfordjournals.org/content/8/4/691.extract
  11. Olwig 1996.
  12. 12.0 12.1 David Matless (2003). "Introduction". In Kay Anderson et al.. Handbook of Cultural Geography. SAGE Publishing. p. 230. ISBN 076196925X. http://books.google.com/books?id=TSWruHZUOr4C&pg=PA230. 
  13. Olwig 1996, p. 633.
  14. Olwig 1996, p. 645.
  15. Olwig 1996, p. 646n1.
  16. Denis Cosgrove (1998). Social Formation and Symbolic Landscape. p. 27. ISBN 0299155145. http://books.google.com/books?id=NrD2-nJ52aYC&pg=PR27. 
  17. Sarah Whatmore & Steve Hinchliffe (2010). "Ecological Landscapes". In Dan Hicks & Mary C. Beaudry. The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies. p. 441. ISBN 0199218714. http://books.google.com/books?id=soqnmu9-rnMC&pg=PA441. 
  18. John Wylie (2011). "Landscape". In John A. Agnew & David N. Livingstone. The SAGE Handbook of Geographical Knowledge. pp. 309-310. ISBN 1446209547. http://books.google.com/books?id=Fhv5rlZ29IsC&pg=PA310. 
  19. http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/11044728/landscape-nature-body-politic-from-britains-renaissance-americas-new-world-book
  20. 20.0 20.1 Cosgrove 2003, p. 136.
  21. Cosgrove 2003, p. 137.

External links[]


The above article is a biography of a living Shimerian, and is therefore governed by the Wikia and Shimer College Wiki policies on biographies of living people. All information should be verifiable from public sources. The article must not be defamatory or invasive of privacy. Please feel free to improve this page.

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