A curation of articles, essays, book reviews and interviews on critical geographical concerns.
Foregrounds the constitutive role that various forms of cultural expression play in shaping the relationship between the social and the spatial. Provides a critical platform for investigating the nature of power, difference and oppression – how they are imagined and performed, opposed and subverted.
In "Geography Speaks: Performative Aspects of Geography", Rob Sullivan argues that speech act theory and the performative can be applied to geography. Speech act theory and performance are familiar subjects within critical theory and the humanities, with a modern lineage spanning back to the mid-twentieth century.
This book is not a manual of research techniques but a revelation of thought processes, the single exception being a hilarious account of her first experiment in fieldwork, when she and her artist sister joined a circus and learned valuable lessons about informal power structures, including that if you get too close to one “good” informant, no one else will tell you much.
In this book, Malabou urges us to think about the event-ality of a destructive event and uses the example of neurological trauma to capture the ‘unheard’ history of the subject. She presents an ontology of becoming, but a becoming that does not belong to the positive connotations of plasticity.
In this collection of essays about the ways in which over the centuries a region and attached identity were imagined for the people and places now broadly labeled as the Marche (‘Marches’ in English) of Italy east of the Apennines from Umbria, Giorgio Mangani shows that this was often a self-conscious act of promotion and celebration by local and regional elites and local populations alike.
This article explores the tiny house movement as a contemporary example of alternative housing practices. Within the stories women tell about their tiny house journeys, we uncover diverse prefigurative practices and politics, which in turn invoke an expanded sense of fairness and agency in and through housing.
This article invites critical geographers to reconsider the conceptual offerings of Austrian-British object-relations psychoanalyst Melanie Klein (1882–1960), whose metapsychology has had a significant but largely unacknowledged contemporary influence on the field via theorists like Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and Lauren Berlant.
This paper explores the potential of prepper awakening narratives – the moment preppers ‘wake up' to the reality of crisis – to contribute to explorations of detachment and denial in the Anthropocene.
Focusing on three new administrative capitals in Southeast Asia – Putrajaya (in Malaysia), Naypyidaw (in Myanmar) and Nusantara (in Indonesia) – we show how places have been mobilized as points of persuasion, or what sociologist Thomas Gieryn has termed “truth spots”.
Here, we undertake an analysis of human-bed bug relations in order to both better understand this contemporary resurgence and critically examine the concept of “companion species.”