Your new experience awaits. Try the new design now and help us make it even better

METHODS article

Front. Psychol.

Sec. Environmental Psychology

This article is part of the Research TopicNarrating the environment: Innovation, looks and stories on real and virtual boundariesView all 13 articles

Mapping meanings: methodological innovations to restore memories of place in a public park in Santiago de Chile

Provisionally accepted
  • 1Escuela de Psicología, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Peñalolén, Chile
  • 2Independent researcher, Río de Janeiro, Brazil

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

In its conventional conception, the map has been defined as a "map-instrument," that is, as a technical device of an informative-practical nature. However, from the perspective of critical cartography, representation is understood rather as a spatial discourse, capable of "producing" political images of the territory and integrating subjectivity as one of its constitutive elements. In parallel, environmental psychology has long examined how people construct places through their interactions with and modifications of their environment, thereby linking places to meanings and to personal and collective experiences. Traditional approaches within this field have increasingly been questioned for their apolitical and uncritical assumptions, underscoring the need to recognize that the person-place relationships emerge from the interaction of personal, social, and political-contextual dimensions. This critique resonates with challenges posed by critical cartography to positivist approaches to map production, emphasizing how individuals and groups actively construct their social and spatial reality. This paper builds on data produced as part of a study conducted in Quebrada de Macul Park in Santiago de Chile, with the aim of developing a novel methodological approach to the study of place-assemblages. Place-assemlages are understood here as an ontological concept for examining analytical entities that intertwine material, symbolic, and practical dimensions of people-place relationships. Our guiding research question is: (How) Can subjective and/or psychosocial processes embedded in people-place relations be cartographically represented? To address this question we conducted (i) a systematic literature review to synthesize recent publications that integrate psychosocial and/or narrative processes with cartographic representations, and (ii) a reflexive thematic analysis of two in-depth interviews from the original study aimed at understanding how narratives might produce diverse multi-layer cartographies through which place is conceived as socially and politically intertwined. In doing so, the paper aims to advance methodological strategies, as well as onto-epistemological discussions, on how to operationalize the ontology of 'place-assemblages', translating this conceptual proposal into a concrete framework for capturing the symbolic, material, and practical nature of the person-place's unity.

Keywords: critical cartography, environmental psychology, geo-indeixcality, GIS, place-assemblage, qualitative methods, Visual methods

Received: 16 Oct 2025; Accepted: 16 Dec 2025.

Copyright: © 2025 Ropert, Rosenbluth, Nilo and Bernardino. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Teresa Ropert

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.