Results for 'imaginative geographies'

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  1.  19
    Constructing imaginative geographies in Genesis.José-Alberto Garijo-Serrano - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (2):8.
    This article considers Edward W. Said’s proposals on ‘imaginative geographies’ as suggested in his leading work Orientalism as a tool to analyse the ideological circumstances that shape geographical spaces in the Bible. My purpose is to discuss how these imaginative geographies are present in the patriarchal narratives of Genesis and how they have left their mark on the history of the interpretation of these texts and on the not always easy relations between members of the religious (...)
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  2.  30
    Imagined geographies: Princeton, Stanford and the boundaries of useful knowledge in postwar America. [REVIEW]Robert Kargon & Stuart Leslie - 1994 - Minerva 32 (2):121-143.
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  3.  22
    : Imagined Geographies in the Mediterranean, Middle East, and Beyond.Emilie Savage-Smith - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):395-397.
  4.  46
    Affect, Ethics, and the Imaginative Geographies of Permanent War: An Interview with Derek Gregory.Keith P. Feldman, Anoop Mirpuri & Georgia M. Roberts - 2009 - Theory and Event 12 (3).
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  5. (1 other version)Transports. Travel, Pleasure, and Imaginative Geography, 1600–1830. [REVIEW]P. M. Harman - 1998 - British Journal for the History of Science 31 (2):241-250.
     
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  6. British Geography's Republic of Letters: Mapping an Imagined Community, 1600-1800.Robert Mayhew - 2004 - Journal of the History of Ideas 65 (2):251-276.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 65.2 (2004) 251-276 [Access article in PDF] British Geography's Republic of Letters: Mapping an Imagined Community, 1600-1800 Robert Mayhew University of Bristol Introduction: Geographies of the Republic of Letters One of the main ways in which scholars molded their self image in early modern Europe was as citizens of the "republic of letters." At the level of professed ideals the concept of (...)
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  7.  11
    Meredith Cohen and Fanny Madeline, eds., Space in the Medieval West: Places, Territories, and Imagined Geographies. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2014. Pp. xvi, 245; 17 black-and-white figures, 15 maps, and 4 tables. $119.95. ISBN: 978-1-4724-0237-0. [REVIEW]Sarah Thompson - 2015 - Speculum 90 (2):530-531.
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  8.  4
    Géographie de voyages cosmiques imaginaires et imaginés.Fernand Verger - 2002 - Hermes 34:37.
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  9.  31
    Mapping science's imagined community: geography as a Republic of Letters, 1600–1800.Robert Mayhew - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):73-92.
    This paper extends discussions of the sociology of the early modern scientific community by paying particular attention to the geography of that community. The paper approaches the issue in terms of the scientific community's self image as a Republic of Letters. Detailed analysis of patterns of citation in two British geography books is used to map the ‘imagined community’ of geographers from the late Renaissance to the age of Enlightenment. What were the geographical origins of authors cited in geography books (...)
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  10.  44
    (1 other version)Making moral imaginations. Research ethics, pedagogy, and professional human geography.Iain Hay - 1998 - Philosophy and Geography 1 (1):55 – 75.
    This paper exhorts geographers to become more active in debate about ethical research practice. It also suggests that ethical theory, practical problems, and lessons learned from postmodern thought make the prospects of establishing prescriptive codes of ethics unlikely. Instead, flexible prompts for moral contemplation might be used to encourage careful thought on matters of ethics. Because the practical feasibility of moral prompts rests on the existence of moral imaginations, it is vital to consider ways in which those imaginations might be (...)
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  11.  10
    Colonizing the Geography of the Imagination.Read Mercer Schuchardt - 2019-10-03 - In Richard B. Davis (ed.), Disney and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 259–270.
    Disney represents a mythology that is universal because they are rapidly acquiring every possible alternate reality that one cares to enter, except for the sexual realm and the Christian religion realm. When Disney owns all possible significant alternate universes, then only Disney can colonize one's imagination, and only Disney will give him/her the lens through which to perceive any competing claim on understanding his/her ultimate Reality. Well, visual containment helps the psyche stay in the mode and the mood for the (...)
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  12. Sensoring the future: Complex geographies of connectivity and communication.Kingsley Dennis - 2008 - World Futures 64 (1):22 – 33.
    Visions of an interconnected future are on the rise that foresee technologies moving toward ubiquitous "everywhere" computing and the rise of the "Internet of Things." This article examines emerging trends in informational connectivity that indicates shifts toward upcoming scenarios of re-imagined geographies and spatial landscapes that are sensored and networked. I examine how the relationships, processes, and flows between people, physical objects, and the environment will make implicit information explicit and engagement between the physical and the digital more commonplace. (...)
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  13.  7
    Gendered Geographies across Time I.Beatriz Hermida Ramos & Miguel Sebastián-Martín - 2024 - Utopian Studies 35 (1):299-303.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Gendered Geographies across Time IBeatriz Hermida Ramos and Miguel Sebastián-MartínEarly Researchers' Seminar for Science and Speculative Fiction, University of Salamanca, Spain, 03 06 2023The first Early Researchers' Seminar for Science and Speculative Fiction: Gendered Geographies across Time showcased the many and diverse approaches to speculative fiction (SF) currently being pursued within the University of Salamanca's English Department, which in a matter of years has become an unexpected (...)
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  14.  43
    Humanist Geography: An Individual's Search for Meaning.Yi-fu Tuan - 2012 - George F. Thompson Pub Co..
    For more than fifty years, Yi-Fu Tuan has carried the study of humanistic geography—what John K. Wright early in the twentieth century called _geosophy_, a blending of geography and philosophy—to new heights, offering with each new book a fresh and often unique intellectual introspection into the human condition. His latest book, _Humanist Geography_, is a testament of all that he has learned and encountered as a geographer. In returning to and reappraising his previous books, Tuan emphasizes how the study of (...)
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  15.  46
    Justice, Geography and Empire in Aeschylus' Eumenides.Rebecca Futo Kennedy - 2006 - Classical Antiquity 25 (1):35-72.
    This paper argues that Aeschylus' Eumenides presents a coherent geography that, when associated with the play's judicial proceedings, forms the basis of an imperial ideology. The geography of Eumenides constitutes a form of mapping, and mapping is associated with imperial power. The significance of this mapping becomes clear when linked to fifth-century Athens' growing judicial imperialism. The creation of the court in Eumenides, in the view of most scholars, refers only to Ephialtes' reforms of 462 BC. But in the larger (...)
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  16.  47
    ""New places for" Old Spots": The changing geographies of domestic livestock animals.Richard Yarwood & Nick Evans - 1998 - Society and Animals 6 (2):137-165.
    This paper considers the real and imagined geographies of livestock animals. In doing so, it reconsiders the spatial relationship between people and domesticated farm animals. Some consideration is given to the origins of domestication and comparisons are drawn between the natural and domesticated geographies of animals. The paper mainly focuses on the contemporary geographies of livestock animals and, in particular, "rare breeds" of British livestock animals. Attention is given to the spatial relationship these animals have with people (...)
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  17.  63
    Geographies of subjectivity, pan-Islam and muslim separatism: Muhammad Iqbal and selfhood.Javed Majeed - 2007 - Modern Intellectual History 4 (1):145-161.
    This essay focuses on the oppositional politics expressed in the historical geography of the Persian and Urdu poetry of Muhammad Iqbal (1877–1938), showing how it emerges from, and breaks with, Urdu and Persian travelogues and poetry of the nineteenth century. It explores the complex relationships between the politics of Muslim separatism in South Asia and European imperialist discourses. There are two defining tensions within this politics. The first is between territorial nationalism and the global imaginings of religious identity, and the (...)
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  18.  69
    (1 other version)What is geography?Alastair Bonnett - 2008 - Thousand Oaks. Calif.: SAGE Publications.
    This text offers readers a short and highly accessible account of the ideas and concepts constituting geography. Drawing out the key themes that define the subject, What is Geography? demonstrates how and why these themes - like environment and geopolitics- are of fundamental importance. Including discussion of both the human and the natural realms, the text looks at key themes like environment, space, and place - as well as geography's methods and the history of the discipline. Introductory but not simplified, (...)
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  19.  1
    The intellectual imagination: knowledge and aesthetics in North Atlantic and African philosophy.Omedi Ochieng - 2018 - Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Groundwork for the intellectual life: ontology, imagination, and praxis -- Radical knowledge: toward a critical contextual ontology of intellectual practice -- Embodied knowledge: intellectual practices as ways of life -- Radical world-building: notes toward a critical contextual aesthetic -- Geographies of the imagination: figurations of the aesthetic at the intersection of African and global arts -- Theses on the intellectual imagination.
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  20.  33
    Chenxi Tang. The Geographic Imagination of Modernity: Geography, Literature, and Philosophy in German Romanticism. x + 356 pp., illus., bibls., index. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2008. $65. [REVIEW]Joan Steigerwald - 2010 - Isis 101 (3):654-655.
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  21.  30
    Imagining for real: essays on creation, attention and correspondence.Tim Ingold - 2022 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    What does imagination do for our perception of the world? Why should reality be broken off from our imagining of it? It was not always thus, and in these essays, Tim Ingold sets out to heal the break between reality and imagination at the heart of modern thought and science. Imagining for Real joins with a lifeworld ever in creation, attending to its formative processes, corresponding with the lives of its human and nonhuman inhabitants. Building on his two previous essay (...)
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  22.  22
    L’imagination dans le Traité de la nature humaine.Jean-Pierre Grima - 2009 - Philosophique 12:47-78.
    La philosophie de David Hume entend rompre avec une théorie classique des facultés, redessinant la place que l'imagination joue dans notre vie psychique et déployant ainsi une géographie mentale inédite. Instrument privilégié de son scepticisme philosophique, cette théorie de l'imagination pose cependant autant de questions qu'elle n'en résout, du fait même qu'associant imagination et conception, elle se voit chargée de rendre compte de tendances contradictoires au sein de l'esprit humain. Une clarification terminologique et conceptuelle permet alors, faute de résoudre ces (...)
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  23.  12
    THE STRAIT OF MESSINA THEN AND NOW - (M.B.) Carbone Geographies of Myth and Places of Identity. The Strait of Scylla and Charybdis in the Modern Imagination. Pp. xvi + 256, ills, map. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. Cased, £85, US$115. ISBN: 978-1-350-11818-8. [REVIEW]Monica Centanni - 2023 - The Classical Review 73 (1):333-335.
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  24.  31
    Géographie morale et tortures délirantes.Romain Duval - 2009 - Nouvelle Revue d'Esthétique 3 (1):105-112.
    Résumé L’étude porte sur la représentation d’un enfer chinois. Les espaces plastiques et l’équivoque domaine du textuel y sont interrogés. Fruit d’une imagination complexe, liée aux syncrétismes religieux et païens, l’image engendre des formes vivantes inattendues, notamment grâce à la facture de l’imagier. Condamné par les sages chinois comme la source du mal, l’esprit de démesure semble gagner, jusque dans les moindres détails, ces enfers aux châtiments hallucinants.
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  25.  11
    Politics and the Religious Imagination.John H. A. Dyck & Paul S. Rowe - 2010 - Routledge.
    Politics and the Religious Imagination is the product of a group of interdisciplinary scholars each analyzing the connections between religious narratives and the construction of regional and global politics, combining a set of theoretical and philosophic insights with several case studies that represent varied geographies and religious customs. The past decade has seen increasing interest in the links between religion and politics, and this edited volume seeks to take religion seriously as a motivator of action. Few studies have attempted (...)
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  26.  35
    Eastern Imaginings: Milton's Moscovia and Beyond.Sharon Eytan - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (3):367 - 376.
    A Brief History of Moscovia is regarded as a minor, slightly odd composition within the Milton canon. Mostly completed before his total blindness in 1652, it stands in an awkward relationship to his other works, being largely composed of extracts from previous writers. This essay considers Milton's selection of factual content as well as his subtle deviations, at times, from his sources? wording. Milton takes us on a journey beginning with exterior landscapes and moves to graphic anthropological details, in the (...)
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  27.  60
    Negotiating nature: Colonial geographies and environmental politics in the Pacific northwest.David A. Rossiter - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (2):113 – 128.
    Noting tension between environmental and aboriginal politics in the Pacific Northwest of North America, this paper explores the historical-geographic constitution of both the Great Bear Rainforest conflict in British Columbia and the Makah whaling conflict in Washington State. By highlighting the uneven production of territoriality between each jurisdiction and tracing these differences though the historical-geographic imaginations of environmental activists and writers of letters to editors of metropolitan newspapers, the paper argues that situated geographies of colonialism inform interactions between environmental (...)
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  28.  77
    Stories at the Memory-Imagination Interface.Myrdene Anderson & Devika Chawla - 2010 - Semiotics:233-241.
    We two semioticians, separated by a generation or two, by geography of a continent or two, and by discipline, launch a fresh metalogue to probe the semiosic behavior of storying.
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  29.  11
    Transition in Knowledge of Chinese Geography in Early Modern Europe: A Historical Investigation on Maps of China.Jingdong Yu - 2019 - Cultura 16 (2):45-65.
    During the 17th and 18th centuries, European investigations into Chinese geography underwent a process of change: firstly, from the wild imagination of the classical era to a natural perspective of modern trade, then historical interpretations of religious missionaries to the scientific mapping conducted by sovereign nation-states. This process not only prompted new production of maps, but also disseminated a large amount of geographical knowledge about China in massive publications. This has enriched the geographical vision of Chinese civilization while providing a (...)
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  30.  22
    Spaces of Modern Theology: Geography and Power in Schleiermacher’s World.Steven R. Jungkeit - 2012 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book explores the imagination of space at the dawn of modern, liberal theology in the writings of Friedrich Schleiermacher.
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  31. Animal Agendas: Conflict over Productive Animals in Twentieth-Century Australian Cities.Andrea Gaynor - 2007 - Society and Animals 15 (1):29-42.
    Over the course of the twentieth century, the number of productive nonhuman animals in Australian cities declined dramatically. This decline resulted—at least in part—from an imaginative geography, in which productive animals were deemed inappropriate occupants of urban spaces. A class-based prioritization of amenity, privacy, order, and the protection of real property values—as well as a gender order within which animal-keeping was not recognized as a legitimate economic activity for women—shaped this imaginative geography of animals that found its most (...)
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  32.  11
    Drawing-out Deleuze and Guattari’s assemblage: new insights for geography.Gareth Abrahams - 2024 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 18 (4):1-38.
    Of all the concepts from Deleuze and Guattari’s corpus, it is the assemblage that has best captured the imagination of theorists working within and outside of Deleuze and Guattarian scholarship. Whilst the concept has been used extensively in geography, such studies do not explain this concept with any depth or precision and rarely connect the assemblage with other concepts like the milieus, territory, machines and the plane of consistency. Geography’s partial engagement with Deleuze and Guattari’s corpus means that some of (...)
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  33.  23
    Shifting the geography of reason: gender, science and religion.Marina Paola Banchetti-Robino & Clevis Headley (eds.) - 2007 - Newcastle, U.K.: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    MARINA PAOLA BANCHETTI-ROBINO is Associate Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Florida Atlantic University. Her areas of research include phenomenology, philosophy of language, philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, and zoosemiotics. Her publications have appeared in such journals as Synthese, Husserl Studies, Idealistic Studies, Philosophy East and West, and The Review of Metaphysics. She has also contributed essays to The Role of Pragmatics in Contemporary Philosophy (1997), Feminist Phenomenology (2000), and Islamic Philosophy and Occidental Phenomenology on the Perennial (...)
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  34. Spaces of geographical thought: deconstructing human geography's binaries.Paul Cloke & Ron Johnston (eds.) - 2005 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.
    Spaces of Geographical Thought examines key ideas – like space and place - which inform the geographic imagination. The text: discusses the core conceptual vocabulary of human geography: agency: structure; state: society; culture: economy; space: place; black: white; man: woman; nature: culture; local: global; and time: space; explains the significance of these binaries in the constitution of geographic thought; and shows how many of these binaries have been interrogated and re-imagined in more recent geographical thinking. A consideration of these binaries (...)
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  35.  18
    Imagining and Living the Revolution: An Arendtian Reading of Rosa Luxemburg's Letters and Writings.Maria Tamboukou - 2014 - Feminist Review 106 (1):27-42.
    In this paper, I look into personal and political entanglements in Rosa Luxemburg's letters and essays revolving around questions and problems of the revolution. The analysis is informed by Hannah Arendt's theorisation of revolutions in modernity, as well as her reading of narratives within the political. What is intriguing about the Luxemburg/ Arendt encounter is the fact that although both theorists consciously refused to connect themselves with feminist ideas and movements of their times and geographies, their writings have inspired (...)
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  36.  15
    Fashioned in the light of physics: the scope and methods of Halford Mackinder's geography.Emily Hayes - 2019 - British Journal for the History of Science 52 (4):569-594.
    Throughout his career the geographer, and first reader in the ‘new’ geography at the University of Oxford, Halford Mackinder (1861–1947) described his discipline as a branch of physics. This essay explores this feature of Mackinder's thought and presents the connections between him and the Royal Institution professor of natural philosophy John Tyndall (1820–1893). My reframing of Mackinder's geography demonstrates that the academic professionalization of geography owed as much to the methods and instruments of popular natural philosophy and physics as it (...)
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  37.  11
    The Holy Place as a Subject for the Study of the Geography of Religion.Henryk Hoffmann - 2006 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 38:99-104.
    The geography of religion is one of the younger areas of religious studies. The subject of her interests is the reciprocal ties that stand between religion and the geographical environment. On the one hand, the influence of the geographical environment on the formation of religious imaginations is investigated, and on the other hand, feedback, that is, what kind of religion does the change in the geographical environment. In addition, this area of ​​religious studies is engaged in the distribution of individual (...)
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  38.  51
    Philosophy and Porous Imagination: Between Coral Reefs.J. Allen - 2008 - South African Journal of Philosophy 27 (4):92-92.
    Diving into the life of the tropical coral reefs and Amadou Hampâté Ba’s reflections on the person conjoin in this work, which is at once philosophical and poetic. The permeable parameters of philosophy, which enable thought to hover between unstable contours rather than to prioritize secure foundations, open to a porous imagination, tracing and retracing panoramic geographies and contemporary tensions of globalization and development. Porous imagination slips, glides, between archipelagos of clay rooftops and refuge dotting the Sudan and the (...)
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  39.  44
    The New Geography of Work.Andrew Ross - 2008 - Theory, Culture and Society 25 (7-8):31-49.
    This article describes the emergence of a prized labor market in sectors that policymakers have designated as the creative industries. Statistics generated about these sectors have been legion. By contrast, there has been precious little attention to the quality of work life with which such livelihoods are associated. The article considers several features of creative work that have a qualitative dimension and recommends a policy-minded approach to each. The second half of the article examines the case for a cross-class coalition (...)
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  40.  31
    Cythère redécouverte : la nouvelle géographie érotique des Lumières.Anne Richardot - 2005 - Clio 22:83-100.
    La littérature utopique des Lumières explore volontiers les enjeux posés par la sexualité et les rapports de genre. De façon ludique, au théâtre ou dans les contes, ou plus sérieuse – avec notamment le Supplément au voyage de Bougainville de Diderot –, les écrivains du xviiie siècle réinventent l’organisation socio-érotique. Dans le cadre d’une île de fantaisie, ils imaginent tantôt un monde régi par les femmes, tantôt une communauté égalitariste débarrassée des tabous, et appellent parfois de leurs vœux une refondation (...)
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  41.  5
    Rapid Analysis of Tourism Geography and Airport Representative Transferability Skills on Foreign Tourist Satisfaction.I. Nyoman Sunartame, Putu Ayu Aryasih, Ida Bagus Putu Puja, Dessy Ruhati & Setya Chendra Wibawa - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:1442-1458.
    This research aims to analyze the relationship between tourism geography and the role of Airport Representatives with transferability skills on foreign tourists' satisfaction in handling airport arrivals and departures. The methodology used is a mixed method which includes interviews, observations, and questionnaires to collect data, as well as path analysis to test the relationship between variables. The results of the analysis show that the "Geography of Tourism" variable shows an f square value of 0.609, which shows a very large or (...)
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  42.  12
    Across Islands and Oceans: Re-imagining Colonial Violence in the Past and the Present.Honni Van Rijswijk & Anthea Vogl - 2019 - Law and Critique 30 (3):293-311.
    The three texts addressed in this review essay challenge us to question and creatively re-imagine the representation of material spaces at the centre of the colonial project: oceans, islands, ships and archives. Elizabeth McMahon deconstructs the island and its metaphorics, charting the relationship of geography, politics and literature through the changing status of islands, as imagined by colonists, beginning in the Caribbean and ending in Australia. Renisa Mawani destabilises colonial geography by re-animating the ocean and presents, amongst others, the ship (...)
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  43.  39
    Networks, narratives and territory in anthropological race classification: towards a more comprehensive historical geography of Europe’s culture.Richard McMahon - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (1):70-94.
    This article aims to integrate discourse analysis of politically instrumental imagined identity geographies with the relational and territorial geography of the communities of praxis and interpretation that produce them. My case study is the international community of nationalist scientists who classified Europe’s biological races in the 1820s—1940s. I draw on network analysis, relational geography, historical sociology and the historical turn to problematize empirically how spatial patterns of this community’s shifting disciplinary and political coalitions, communication networks and power relations emerged, (...)
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  44.  21
    Conceptualizing In-Text “Kshetra”: Postcolonial Allahabad’s Cultural Geography in Neelum Saran Gour’s Allahabad Aria and Invisible Ink.Chhandita Das & Priyanka Tripathi - 2021 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 11:389-403.
    Literary renditions of cities have always gravitated towards the spatial imagination and its ethical counterpart outside the textual space. This paper explores the multicultural geography of the North Indian city Allahabad observed through Neelum Saran Gour’s postcolonial narratives Allahabad Aria and Invisible Ink, projecting the narrative alignment of spatial aesthetics and cultural ethics. Interrogating the spatial dimensions of a “narrative world” within narrative theory and its interdisciplinary crossover with cultural geography, the article seeks to examine Gour’s literary city not simply (...)
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  45.  16
    The Psychology, Geography, and Architecture of Horror: How Places Creep Us Out.Francis T. McAndrew - 2020 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 4 (2):47-62.
    Why do some types of settings and some combinations of sensory information induce a sense of dread in humans? This article brings empirical evidence from psychological research to bear on the experience of horror, and explains why the tried-and-true horror devices intuitively employed by writers and filmmakers work so well. Natural selection has favored individuals who gravitated toward environments containing the “right” physical and psychological features and avoided those which posed a threat. Places that contain a bad mix of these (...)
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  46.  18
    From space to spatiality: critical spatial discourse analysis as a framework for the geo-graphing of media texts.Fulya Vatansever - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (1):18-35.
    The myriad ways in which spatiality, or socially produced space, impinges on media texts is the overarching concern of this study. Responding to Edward Soja’s call for an assertive foregrounding of a critical spatial perspective, this article is an ontological reassertion of space in relation to news media discourse and argues that the socially constructed spatiality of a journalistic text is just as revealingly significant as its historicality and sociality. Introduced here is Critical Spatial Discourse Analysis (CSDA), a methodological framework (...)
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  47. William James at the boundaries: philosophy, science, and the geography of knowledge.Francesca Bordogna - 2008 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    At Columbia University in 1906, William James gave a highly confrontational speech to the American Philosophical Association (APA). He ignored the technical philosophical questions the audience had gathered to discuss and instead addressed the topic of human energy. Tramping on the rules of academic decorum, James invoked the work of amateurs, read testimonials on the benefits of yoga and alcohol, and concluded by urging his listeners to take up this psychological and physiological problem. What was the goal of this unusual (...)
  48.  25
    Places, spaces, holes for knowing and writing the earth: the geography curriculum and Derrida's Khôra.Christine Winter - 2009 - Ethics and Education 4 (1):57-68.
    This article enquires into the value of 'concepts' as a framework for the school curriculum by questioning their contribution towards our responsibilities for thinking about the earth. I take Derrida's deconstructive reading of Plato's Timaeus to show how spaces in meaning can be revealed, and more transgressive ways of knowing invited in. Derrida's Kh ra marks the opportunity for something new, productive and unforeseeable to arise as the play of traces unfurls. A deconstructive reading of the geography national curriculum policy (...)
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  49.  14
    Across Islands and Oceans: Re-imagining Colonial Violence in the Past and the Present: Renisa Mawani. 2018. Across Oceans of Law: The Komagata Maru and Jurisdiction in the Time of Empire. Durham: Duke University Press Elizabeth McMahon. 2016. Islands, Identity and the Literary Imagination. London and New York: Anthem Press Stewart Motha. 2018. Archiving Sovereignty: Law, History, Violence. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. [REVIEW]Anthea Vogl & Honni Rijswijk - 2019 - Law and Critique 30 (3):293-311.
    The three texts addressed in this review essay challenge us to question and creatively re-imagine the representation of material spaces at the centre of the colonial project: oceans, islands, ships and archives. Elizabeth McMahon deconstructs the island and its metaphorics, charting the relationship of geography, politics and literature through the changing status of islands, as imagined by colonists, beginning in the Caribbean and ending in Australia. Renisa Mawani destabilises colonial geography by re-animating the ocean and presents, amongst others, the ship (...)
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  50. The Creative Imagination and the Study Of Place.Gary Backhaus - 2001 - Philosophy and Geography 4 (2):239-243.
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