Scher, PhilipCox, Nikki2019-09-182019-09-182019-09-18https://hdl.handle.net/1794/24943American wilderness is constructed as a space free from human contact. We know objectively this cannot be true: humans have relationships with landscapes and cultural systems of meaning and significance for the outdoors. It is through investigating the origins of American public lands and the reverence frequently practiced for the outdoors in American culture that we can come to identify the systems of exclusion that police the outdoors. Looking specifically at the example of thru-hiking and the identity categories of race, gender, and class, it becomes clear the intersections at which the privileged few gain access to these pristine and profound places while others do not. Moreover, by exploring these systems on can deny the universalized and dominant narrative of the outdoors, instead recognizing the diversity of experiences and realities of human engagement with landscape. Ultimately, this work suggests that by being more representative, accessible, and inclusive public lands, and the agencies which manage them can be more equitable to the public they serve.en-USAll Rights Reserved.American wildernessBackpackingEquityDiversityInclusionOutdoorsThru-HIkingWildernessAlmost Nowhere: Problematizing the Exclusivity and Coloniality of American Wilderness and Thru-HikingElectronic Thesis or Dissertation