How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management
Purpose – Using the theory of sensibility, the purpose of this paper is to analyze how T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land furthers our understanding of sustainable property management. Design/methodology/approach – Inter-connected indicators of environmental performance disclosures (EPD) and epistemolog...
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| Format: | Journal Article |
| Published: |
Emerald
2019
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| Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77486 |
| _version_ | 1848763853887766528 |
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| author | Brown, Alistair |
| author_facet | Brown, Alistair |
| author_sort | Brown, Alistair |
| building | Curtin Institutional Repository |
| collection | Online Access |
| description | Purpose – Using the theory of sensibility, the purpose of this paper is to analyze how T.S. Eliot’s The Waste
Land furthers our understanding of sustainable property management.
Design/methodology/approach – Inter-connected indicators of environmental performance disclosures
(EPD) and epistemological-based aesthetic environmental accounts (EBAEA) are used to textually analyze
The Waste Land’s heightening of sustainable property management.
Findings – The results of the study show that the level of EPD of The Waste Land was 80 per cent, while the
level of The Waste Land’s EBAEA was 100 per cent. In terms of sustainable property management,
the images of sustainable property management that permeate The Waste Land furthers our understanding
of the apprehension of urban living, the intensification of assets and materials, the intrusiveness of city
landmarks, the ephemeralness of the profit and loss, the inconstancy of water and the tension of
torrid landscapes.
Research limitations/implications – A research implication arising from the results of the study is
that the property-poetry nexus may actualize new possibilities for discerning and imagining sustainable
property management.
Practical implications – The results of the study offer fruitful paths for understanding sustainability
endeavour for planners, property managers, valuers, occupiers, accountants and developers.
Social implications – TheWaste Land’s complex, multi-vocal, figurative, seemingly ambiguous lines render
a sophisticated form of sustainable property scholarship that shapes aesthetic environmental accounts.
Originality/value – The study’s originality rests in its methodological approach to identify, interpret and
understand sustainable property management in a modernist poem.
Keywords Environmental performance disclosures,
Epistemological-based aesthetic environmental accounts, Sustainable property management |
| first_indexed | 2025-11-14T11:10:04Z |
| format | Journal Article |
| id | curtin-20.500.11937-77486 |
| institution | Curtin University Malaysia |
| institution_category | Local University |
| last_indexed | 2025-11-14T11:10:04Z |
| publishDate | 2019 |
| publisher | Emerald |
| recordtype | eprints |
| repository_type | Digital Repository |
| spelling | curtin-20.500.11937-774862020-02-27T03:46:28Z How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management Brown, Alistair 1501 - Accounting, Auditing and Accountability 1503 - Business and Management 1599 - Other Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services Purpose – Using the theory of sensibility, the purpose of this paper is to analyze how T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land furthers our understanding of sustainable property management. Design/methodology/approach – Inter-connected indicators of environmental performance disclosures (EPD) and epistemological-based aesthetic environmental accounts (EBAEA) are used to textually analyze The Waste Land’s heightening of sustainable property management. Findings – The results of the study show that the level of EPD of The Waste Land was 80 per cent, while the level of The Waste Land’s EBAEA was 100 per cent. In terms of sustainable property management, the images of sustainable property management that permeate The Waste Land furthers our understanding of the apprehension of urban living, the intensification of assets and materials, the intrusiveness of city landmarks, the ephemeralness of the profit and loss, the inconstancy of water and the tension of torrid landscapes. Research limitations/implications – A research implication arising from the results of the study is that the property-poetry nexus may actualize new possibilities for discerning and imagining sustainable property management. Practical implications – The results of the study offer fruitful paths for understanding sustainability endeavour for planners, property managers, valuers, occupiers, accountants and developers. Social implications – TheWaste Land’s complex, multi-vocal, figurative, seemingly ambiguous lines render a sophisticated form of sustainable property scholarship that shapes aesthetic environmental accounts. Originality/value – The study’s originality rests in its methodological approach to identify, interpret and understand sustainable property management in a modernist poem. Keywords Environmental performance disclosures, Epistemological-based aesthetic environmental accounts, Sustainable property management 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77486 10.1108/PM-06-2019-0033 Emerald restricted |
| spellingShingle | 1501 - Accounting, Auditing and Accountability 1503 - Business and Management 1599 - Other Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services Brown, Alistair How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title | How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title_full | How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title_fullStr | How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title_full_unstemmed | How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title_short | How The Waste Land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| title_sort | how the waste land furthers an understanding of sustainable property management |
| topic | 1501 - Accounting, Auditing and Accountability 1503 - Business and Management 1599 - Other Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services |
| url | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77486 |