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E-grāmata: Theory and Methods: Critical Essays in Human Geography

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This volume tackles the complex terrain of theory and methods, seeking to exemplify the major philosophical, social-theoretic and methodological developments - some with clear political and ethical implications - that have traversed human geography since the era of the 1960s when spatial science came to the fore. Coverage includes Marxist and humanistic geographies, and their many variations over the years, as well as ongoing debates about agency-structure and the concepts of time, space, place and scale. Feminist and other 'positioned' geographies, alongside poststructuralist and posthumanist geographies, are all evidenced, as well as writings that push against the very 'limits' of what human geography has embraced over these fifty plus years. The volume combines readings that are well-known and widely accepted as 'classic', with readings that, while less familiar, are valuable in how they illustrate different possibilities for theory and method within the discipline. The volume also includes a substantial introduction by the editor, contextualising the readings, and in the process providing a new interpretation of the last half-century of change within the thoughts and practices of human geography.
Acknowledgements ix
Series Preface xi
Introduction xiii
PART I SPATIAL SCIENCE AND ITS CRITICS
`A Geographic Methodology', in Theoretical Geography, Lund: Gleerup, pp. 1-37
3(38)
William Bunge
`Sensations and Spatial Science: Gratification and Anxiety in the Production of Ordered Landscapes', Environment and Planning A, 30, pp. 235-46
41(12)
D. Sibley
`Retheorizing Economic Geography: From the Quantitative Revolution to the ``Cultural Turn''', Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 91, pp. 546-65
53(22)
Trevor J. Barnes
PART II MARXIST GEOGRAPHY AND ITS EARLY RECONSTRUCTIONS
`Revolutionary and Counter Revolutionary Theory in Geography and the Problem of Ghetto Formation', Antipode, 4, pp. 1-13
75(14)
David Harvey
`The Socio-Spatial Dialectic', Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 70, pp. 207-25
89(20)
Edward W. Soja
`The Matter of Nature', Antipode, 21, pp. 106-20
109(18)
Margaret FitzSimmons
PART III HUMANISTIC GEOGRAPHY AND ITS EARLY RECONSTRUCTIONS
`Humanistic Geography', Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 66, pp. 266-76
127(12)
Yi-Fu Tuan
`Practicing Humanistic Geography', Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 74, pp. 353-74
139(22)
Susan J. Smith
`Prospect, Perspective and the Evolution of the Landscape Idea', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 10, pp. 45-62
161(20)
Denis Cosgrove
PART IV AGENCY AND STRUCTURE
`Human Agency and Human Geography', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 6, pp. 1-18
181(18)
Derek Gregory
`Human Agency and Human Geography Revisited: A Critique of ``New Models'' of the Self', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 18, pp. 122-39
199(18)
Steve Pile
`Space and Causality, or Whatever Happened to the Subject?', in Benno Werlen, Society, Action and Space: An Alternative Human Geography, London: Routledge, pp. 1-20; 209-10; 210a, 210b
217(26)
Benno Werlen
PART V TIME, SPACE, PLACE AND SPACE-TIME
`Social Reproduction and the Time-Geography of Everyday Life', Geografiska Annale, Series B, Human Geography, 63, pp. 5-22
243(18)
Allan Pred
`Geography and the Realm of Passages', in P. Gould and G. Olsson (eds), A Search for Common Ground, Pion: London, pp. 252-9
261(8)
Erik Wallin
`Politics and Space/Time', New Left Review, 196, pp. 65-84
269(22)
Doreen Massey
PART VI SCALING HUMAN GEOGRAPHIES
`Is There a Place for the Rational Actor? A Geographical Critique of the Rational Choice Paradigm', Economic Geography, 68, pp. 1-21
291(22)
Trevor J. Barnes
Eric Sheppard
`Beyond State-Centrism? Space, Territoriality and Geographical Scale in Globalization Studies', Theory and Society, 28, pp. 39-53; 68-75
313(24)
Neil Brenner
`Human Geography without Scale', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 30, pp. 416-32
337(20)
Sallie A. Marston
John Paul Jones III
Keith Woodward
PART VII FEMINIST AND OTHER `POSITIONED' GEOGRAPHIES
`The Geography of Women: An Historical Introduction', Antipode, 6, pp. 1-19
357(20)
Alison M. Hayford
`Changing Ourselves: A Geography of Position', in R.J. Johnston (ed.), The Challenge for Geography: A Changing World, a Changing Discipline, Blackwell: Oxford, pp. 198-214
377(18)
Peter Jackson
`Postcolonialising Geography: Tactics and Pitfalls', Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 24, pp. 273-89
395(18)
Jenny Robinson
`I Lost an Arm on My Last Trip Home: Black Geographies', in K. McKittrick, Demonic Grounds: Black Women and the Cartographies of Struggle, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, pp. 1-23
413(30)
Katherine McKittrick
PART VIII POSTSTRUCTURALIST GEOGRAPHIES
`Geography and Power: The Work of Michel Foucault', in Peter Burke (ed.), Michel Foucault: Critical Essays, Scholar Press: Aldershot, UK, pp. 147-56
443(10)
Felix Driver
`Understanding Diversity: The Problem of/for ``Theory''', in R.J. Johnston, Peter J. Taylor and Michael J. Watts (eds), Geographies of Global Change: Remapping the World in the Late-Twentieth Century, Blackwell: Oxford, pp. 280-94
453(18)
Linda McDowell
`My Dinner with Derrida, or Spatial Analysis and Poststructuralism Do Lunch', Environment and Planning A, 30, pp. 247-60
471(14)
D.P. Dixon
J.P. Jones III
`Poststructuralist Geographies: The Essential Selection', in Paul Cloke, Philip Crang and Mark Goodwin (eds), Envisioning Human Geographies, Edward Arnold: London, pp. 146-71
485(28)
Marcus A. Doel
PART IX POSTHUMANIST GEOGRAPHIES
`Inhuman/nonhuman/human: Actor-Network Theory and the Prospects for a Nondualistic and Symmetrical Perspective on Nature and Society', Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 15, pp. 731-56
513(26)
Jonathan Murdoch
`The Body as ``Place'': Reflexivity and Fieldwork in Kano, Nigeria', in Heidi J. Nast and Steve Pile (eds), Places Through The Body, Routledge, London, pp. 93-116
539(24)
Heidi J. Nast
`Making Connections and Thinking through Emotions: Between Geography and Psychotherapy', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 30, pp. 433-48
563(16)
Liz Bondi
`From Born to Made: Technology, Biology and Space', Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 30, pp. 463-76
579(16)
Nigel Thrift
PART X LIMITS TO HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
`Hemming the Way', in Gunnar Olsson, Lines of Power/Limits of Language, University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis, pp. 151-61
595(12)
Gunnar Olsson
`Coming Out of Geography: Towards a Queer Epistemology', Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 15, pp. 223-37
607(16)
Jon Binnie
`Neo-Critical Geography, Or, The Flat Pluralist World of Business Class', Antipode, 37, pp. 887-99
623(14)
Neil Smith
Name Index 637
Chris Philo was appointed to a Chair in Geography at the University of Glasgow in 1995. His research interests concern the historical, cultural and rural geographies of mental ill-health, as well as social geographies of 'outsiders'; children's geographies; new animal geographies; historical and contemporary figurations of public space; Foucauldian studies and the history, historiography and theoretical development of geography