Space and Social Theory: Interpreting Modernity and Postmodernity / Edition 1

Space and Social Theory: Interpreting Modernity and Postmodernity / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
0631194673
ISBN-13:
9780631194675
Pub. Date:
07/07/1997
Publisher:
Wiley
ISBN-10:
0631194673
ISBN-13:
9780631194675
Pub. Date:
07/07/1997
Publisher:
Wiley
Space and Social Theory: Interpreting Modernity and Postmodernity / Edition 1

Space and Social Theory: Interpreting Modernity and Postmodernity / Edition 1

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Overview

In this book, the world's leading spacial theorists provide new accounts of the central questions and issues in social-spacial theory with critical perspectives on the post-modern condition.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780631194675
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 07/07/1997
Series: Institute of British Geographers Special Publication , #33
Pages: 416
Product dimensions: 6.83(w) x 9.74(h) x 0.88(d)

About the Author

Georges Benko is Professor of Geography at the University of Paris I (Pantheon-Sorbonne). He is a member of the editorial boards of Espaces et Societes and GeoJournal and editor of the series Geographies en Liberté and Theorie Sociale Contemporaine, both published by l'Harmattan in Paris. He is the author of Geographie des Technopoles (Masson), co-author (with Alain Lipietz) of Les Regions qui Gagnent and editor of various books on Industrial Change and Social Theory.

Ulf Strohmayer is currently lecturer in human geography at the University of Wales, Lampeter. He is the author of numerous articles, co-editor of two books and author, together with Matthew Hannah, of Gnostic Materialism: Cosmology and the Ruins of Social Theory.

Table of Contents

List of Plates.

List of Figures.

List of Contributors.

Preface.

Introduction: Modernity, Postmodernity and the Social Sciences (Georges Benko).

Part I Reasons, Texts and Debates Around Postmodernism.

Postmodern Bloodlines (Michael Dear).

Social Theory, Postmodernism, and the Critique of Development (Richard Peet).

Shelf Length Zero: The Disappearance of the Geographical Text (Michael Curry).

Part II Writing Space, Forming Identities.

Re-Presenting the Extended Moment of Danger: A Meditation on Hypermodernity, Identity and the Montage Form (Allan Pred).

Identity, Space, and other Uncertainties (Wolfgang Natter and John Paul Jones).

Belonging: Spaces of Meandering Desire (Ulf Strohmayer).

Spatial Stress and Resistance: Social Meanings of Spatialization (Rob Shields).

Lacan and Geography: the Production of Space Revisited (Derek Gregory).

Part III Planning and the Postmodern .

Panning in/for Postmodernity (Ed Soja).

Warp, Woof and Regulation: A Tool for Social Science (Alain Lipietz).

Institutional Reflexivity and the Rise of the Regional State (Phil Cooke).

Part IV The Politics of Difference.

Postmodern Becomings: From the Space of Form to the Space of Potentiality (Julie Kathy Gibson-Graham).

Geopolitics and the Postmodern: Issues or Knowledge, Difference and North-South Relations (David Slater).

Postmodern Space and Japanese Tradition (Augustin Berque).

Imperfect Panopticism: Envisioning the Construction of Normal Lives (Matt Hannah).

Imagining the Normad: Mobility and the Postmodern Primitive (Tim Cresswell).

Conclusion.

Forget the Delivery, or, What Post are We Talking about? (Ulf Strohmayer).

Index

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