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E-grāmata: People, Place, and Space Reader

4.46/5 (26 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (CUNY Graduate Center, USA), Edited by (CUNY Graduate Center, USA), Edited by (CUNY Graduate Center, USA), Edited by (CUNY Graduate Center, USA), Edited by (CUNY Graduate Center, USA)
  • Formāts: 480 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317811879
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  • Formāts: 480 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317811879
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The People, Place, and Space Reader brings together the writings of scholars, designers, and activists from a variety of fields to make sense of the makings and meanings of the world we inhabit. They help us to understand the relationships between people and the environment at all scales, and to consider the active roles individuals, groups, and social structures play in creating the environments in which people live, work, and play. These readings highlight the ways in which space and place are produced through large- and small-scale social, political, and economic practices, and offer new ways to think about how people engage the environment in multiple and diverse ways.

Providing an essential resource for students of urban studies, geography, sociology and many other areas, this book brings together important but, till now, widely dispersed writings across many inter-related disciplines. Introductions from the editors precede each section; introducing the texts, demonstrating their significance, and outlining the key issues surrounding the topic. A companion website, PeoplePlaceSpace.org, extends the work even further by providing an on-going series of additional reading lists that cover issues ranging from food security to foreclosure, psychiatric spaces to the environments of predator animals.

Recenzijas

A smart and savvy collection that is genuinely interdisciplinary, The People, Place and Space Reader provides a new take on the foundations of the spatial turn across the contemporary humanities and social sciences while also giving them a much-needed shake: its selections and juxtapositions suggest new twists and turns of tremendous intellectual and practical import.

-- Derek Gregory, author of The Colonial Present: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq (Wiley 2004) and Spaces (Routledge 2008)

This anthology does extraordinary service in bringing together the most important and often hard-to-find readings dealing with how people respond to, interact in, and conceive of space and place. The book shows how many different disciplines have contributed to a social science of space, and how much our understanding of particular places has benefited from this interdisciplinary field. For anyone who wonders about the built environment around them, this book is invaluable.

-- Thomas Fisher, author of In the Scheme of Things: Alternative Thinking on the Practice of Architecture (2006) and Designing to Avoid Disaster: The Nature of Fracture-Critical Design (2012).

By drawing on classic work, some too long overlooked, as well as provocative recent writings in psychology, cultural geography and anthropology, design, and womens studies, the editors provide invaluable guideposts for a social science that is committed to egalitarian and democratic values.

-- Harry Heft, author of Ecological Psychology in Context: James Gibson, Roger Barker, and the Legacy of William James (Psychology 2005)

A timely and rich collection that crosses disciplines, spaces, and times. Combining classical pieces and more recent studies, this interdisciplinary reader offers fresh perspectives on important topics such as home, identity, publicness, power, and subjectivity. Contributions by anthropologists, geographers, historians, planners, psychologists, and sociologists offer productive and thoughtful engagements with multiple theories, methods, and topics. An outstanding reader that will be of great interests to scholars and students of space and place.

-- Farha Ghannam, author of Live and Die Like a Man: Gender Dynamics in Urban Egypt (Stanford 2013)

I have been waiting for years for a book like this to come along. Now I will no longer have to cobble together the most innovative work in critical geography and environmental psychology for my students -- they are all here together, in an affordable and accessible volume. The editors' commitments to radical critique, inclusion, and accessibility are carried all the way through. Here is a radical geography education for the rest of us.

-- Laura Barraclough, author of Making the San Fernando Valley: Rural Landscapes, Urban Development, and White Privilege (UGA 2011) and co-author of The Peoples Guide to Los Angeles (UCA 2012)

Editors biographies xv
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction xix
SECTION 1 DIVERSE CONCEPTIONS BETWEEN PEOPLE, PLACE, AND SPACE
1(38)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
3(4)
1 Constructing Differences in Public Spaces: Race, Class, and Gender as Interlocking Systems (1996)
7(5)
Susan Ruddick
2 Spacetime and the World (2005)
12(5)
David Harvey
3 Psychological Ecology (1943)
17(5)
Kurt Lewin
4 Junkspace(2002)
22(5)
Rem Koolhaas
5 One Place after Another: Notes on Site Specificity (1997)
27(7)
Miwon Kwon
6 Spatializing Culture: An Engaged Anthropological Approach to Space and Place (2014)
34(5)
Setha Low
SECTION 2 HUMAN PERCEPTION AND ENVIRONMENTAL EXPERIENCE
39(32)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
41(4)
7 Psychological Maps of Paris (1970)
45(5)
Stanley Milgram
Denise Jodelet
8 The City Image and Its Elements (1960)
50(6)
Kevin Lynch
9 The Theory of Affordances (1979)
56(5)
James J. Gibson
10 Spatial Invasion (1969)
61(4)
Robert Sommer
11 Theory of the Derive and Definitions (1958)
65(6)
Guy Debord
SECTION 3 PLACE AND IDENTITY
71(32)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
73(4)
12 Place-identity: Physical World Socialization of the Self (1983)
77(5)
Harold H. Proshansky
Abbe K. Fabian
Robert Kaminoff
13 Urban Landscape History: The Sense of Place and the Politics of Space (1995)
82(5)
Dolores Hayden
14 The Idea of Chinatown: The Power of Place and Institutional Practice in the Making of a Racial Category (1987)
87(5)
Kay J. Anderson
15 The Brandon Archive (2005)
92(5)
Judith Jack Halberstam
16 The Poor Little Rich Man (1900)
97(3)
Adolf Loos
17 Migration, Material Culture and Tragedy: Four Moments in Caribbean Migration (2008)
100(3)
Daniel Miller
SECTION 4 POWER, SUBJECTIVITY, AND SPACE
103(42)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
107(4)
18 Tall Storeys (2008)
111(7)
Kim Dovey
19 Desire and the Prosthetics of Supervision: A Case of Maquiladora Flexibility (2001)
118(4)
Melissa W. Wright
20 Mothers Reclaiming Our Children (2007)
122(6)
Ruth Wilson Gilmore
21 The Social Becomes the Spatial, the Spatial Becomes the Social: Enclosures, Social Change and the Becoming of Places in the Swedish Province of Skane (1985)
128(5)
Allan Pred
22 Software-sorted Geographies (2005)
133(6)
Stephen D.N. Graham
23 The Habitus and the Space of Life-styles (1984)
139(6)
Pierre Bourdieu
SECTION 5 MEANINGS OF HOME
145(36)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
147(4)
24 Domesticity (1986)
151(5)
Witold Rybczynski
25 Disability. Embodiment and the Meaning of the Home (2004)
156(7)
Rob Imrie
26 You Got to Remember You Live in Public Housing: Place-making in an American Housing Project" (2008)
163(5)
Talja Blokland
27 The House as Symbol of the Self (1974)
168(5)
Clare Cooper
28 Home Rules (1994)
173
Denis Wood
Robert J. Beck
29 Home: Territory and Identity (2000)
17(164)
J. Macgregor Wise
SECTION 6 "PUBLIC" AND "PRIVATE"
181(36)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
183(4)
30 Putting the Public Back into Public Space (1998)
187(5)
Kurt Iveson
31 To Go Again to Hyde Park: Public Space, Rights, and Social Justice (2003)
192(5)
Don Mitchell
32 Contesting Crime, Order, and Migrant Spaces in Beijing (2001)
197(5)
Li Zhang
33 Privacy Could Only Be Had in Public: Gay Uses of the Streets (1995)
202(5)
George Chauncey
34 People Who Live in Glass Houses: Edith Farnsworth, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, and Phillip Johnson (1998)
207(5)
Alice T. Friedman
35 The Prison of "Public Space" (2008)
212(5)
Mark Kingwell
SECTION 7 THE URBAN EXPERIENCE
217(36)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
219(4)
36 The Metropolis and Mental Life (1903)
223(4)
Georg Simmel
37 Paris. Capital of the Nineteenth Century: Expose of 1939 (1939)
227(5)
Walter Benjamin
38 Spatial Practices: Walking in the City (1984)
232(5)
Michel de Certeau
39 The Uses of Sidewalks: Contact (1961)
237(4)
Jane Jacobs
40 People as Infrastructure: Intersecting Fragments in Johannesburg (2004)
241(6)
AbdouMaliq Simone
41 City Life and Difference (1990)
247(6)
Iris Marion Young
SECTION 8 LANDSCAPE: NATURE AND CULTURE
253(30)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
255(4)
42 A Pair of Ideal Landscapes (1984)
259(4)
John Brinkerhoff (J.B.) Jackson
43 The African Origins of Carolina Rice Culture (2000)
263(5)
Judith Carney
44 This Land Is Ours Now: Spatial Imaginaries and the Struggle for Land in Brazil (2004)
268(5)
Wendy Wolford
45 Beyond Wilderness and Lawn (1998)
273(5)
Michael Pollan
46 Ecstatic Places (1990)
278(5)
Louise Chawla
SECTION 9 THE SOCIAL PRODUCTION OF SPACE AND TIME
283(38)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
285(4)
47 The Production of Space (1991)
289(5)
Henri Lefebvre
48 Railroad Space and Railroad Time (1978)
294(4)
Wolfgang Schivelbusch
49 A Time for Space and a Space for Time: The Social Production of the Vacation House (1980)
298(6)
Anthony D. King
50 A Room of One's Own (1929)
304(5)
Virginia Woolf
51 The Last Place They Thought Of: Black Women's Geographies (2006)
309(5)
Katherine McKittrick
52 Class Struggle on Avenue B: The Lower East Side as Wild Wild West (1996)
314(7)
Neil Smith
SECTION 10 SHIFTING PERSPECTIVES: OPTICS FOR REVEALING CHANGE AND REWORKING SPACE
321(34)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
323(4)
53 Panopticism (1975)
327(3)
Michel Foucault
54 Toward an Architecture of Humility: On the Value of Experience (1999)
330(4)
Juhani Pallasmaa
55 Rethinking Environmental Racism: White Privilege and Urban Development in Southern California (2000)
334(6)
Laura Pulido
56 Editorial: Mobilities, Immobilities and Moorings (2006)
340(5)
Kevin Hannam
Mimi Sheller
John Urry
57 Introduction: The Global and the Intimate (2012)
345(5)
Geraldine Pratt
Victoria Rosner
58 On the Grounds of Globalization: A Topography for Feminist Political Engagement (2001)
350(5)
Cindi Katz
SECTION 11 THE SPATIAL IMAGINATION
355(36)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
357(4)
59 Invention, Memory, and Place (2000)
361(5)
Edward W. Said
60 Negotiating the Muslim American Hyphen (2008)
366(6)
Selouk R. Sirin
Michelle Fine
61 Maps and the Formation of the Geo-Body of Siam (1996)
372(5)
Thongchai Winichakul
62 Drawing the Coral Heads: Mental Mapping and its Physical Representation in a Polynesian Community (2003)
377(5)
Richard Feinberg
Ute J. Dymon
Pu Paiaki
Pu Rangituteki
Pu Nukuriaki
Matthew Rollins
63 How Do We Get Out of This Capitalist Place? (1996)
382(5)
J.K. Gibson-Graham
64 De-, Dis-, Ex- (1987)
387(4)
Bernard Tschumi
SECTION 12 DEMOCRATIC PROSPECTS AND POSSIBILITIES
391(30)
Editors' Introduction and Suggestions for Further Reading
393(4)
65 Restoring Meaningful Subjects and "Democratic Hope" to Psychology (2014)
397(6)
Susan Saegert
66 Rhizome (1987)
403(4)
Gilles Deleuze
Felix Guattari
67 Living the "Revolution" in an Egyptian Village: Moral Action in a National Space(2012)
407(4)
Lila Abu-Lughod
68 Introduction: Traffic in Democracy (1999)
411(5)
Michael Sorkin
69 Containing Children: Some Lessons on Planning for Play from New York City (2002)
416(5)
Roger A. Hart
Copyright information 421(5)
Further recommended reading lists -- also see www.peopleplacespace.org 426(2)
Index 428
Jen Jack Gieseking is a cultural geographer and environmental psychologist and Postdoctoral Fellow in the Digital and Computational Studies Initiative at Bowdoin College. William Mangold is a partner in a small design firm and Adjunct Professor in Interior Design at Pratt Institute. Cindi Katz is Professor of Geography, Environmental Psychology, Womens Studies, and American Studies and Executive Officer of the Earth and Environmental Sciences Program at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York. Setha Low is Professor of Environmental Psychology, Geography, Anthropoly, and Womens Studies, and Director of the Public Space Research Group at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York. Susan Saegert is Professor of Environmental Psychology, founding director of the Center for the Study of Women and Society, and former director of the Center for Human Environments, all at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York.