place-making
The universal human act of building a mental world around a place through memory and imagination. Not construction but perception: you stand somewhere, recall what happened there, imagine what it looked like then, and the place thickens with meaning. Place-making involves multiple acts of remembering and imagining that fuse into a single experience of being somewhere. Everyone does it; some cultures do it as a central practice.
Etymology
English compound. Developed as a key concept by Keith Basso in Wisdom Sits in Places (1996), drawing on his decades of work with the Western Apache at Cibecue, Arizona.
*
Surprise Me With a Word