Table of Contents
List of Figures ix
Notes on Contributors xi
Series Editors’ Preface xvii
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxi
Introduction 1Trevor J. Barnes and Eric Sheppard
Part I Radical Geography within North America 37
1 Issues of “Race” and Early Radical Geography: Our Invisible Proponents 39Audrey Kobayashi
2 Myths, Cults, Memories, and Revisions in Radical Geographic History: Revisiting the Detroit Geographical Expedition and Institute 59Gwendolyn C. Warren, Cindi Katz, and Nik Heynen
3 Radical Paradoxes: The Making of Antipode at Clark University 87Matthew T. Huber, Chris Knudson, and Renee Tapp
4 A “Necessary Stop on the Circuit”: Radical Geography at Simon Fraser University 117Nicholas Blomley and Eugene McCann
5 The Life and Times of the Union of Socialist Geographers 149Linda Peake
6 Baltimore as Truth Spot: David Harvey, Johns Hopkins, and Urban Activism 183Eric Sheppard and Trevor J. Barnes
7 Berkeley In‐Between: Radicalizing Economic Geography 211Jamie Peck and Trevor J. Barnes
8 Radical Geography in the Midwest 247Mickey Lauria, Bryan Higgins, Mark Bouman, Kent Mathewson, Trevor J. Barnes, and Eric Sheppard
9 Radical Geography Goes Francophone 273Juan‐Luis Klein
Part II Radical Geography beyond North America 301
10 Japan: The Yada Faction versus North American Radical Geography 303Fujio Mizuoka
11 The Rise and Decline of Radical Geography in South Africa 315Brij Maharaj
12 The Geographies of Critical Geography: The Development of Critical Geography in Mexico 329Veronica Crossa
13 “Let’s here [sic] it for the Brits, You help us here”: North American Radical Geography and British Radical Geography Education 343Joanne Norcup
14 “Can these words, commonly applied to the Anglo‐Saxon social sciences, fit the French?” Circulation, Translation, and Reception of Radical Geography in the French Academic Context 357Yann Calberac
Conclusion 371Eric Sheppard and Trevor J. Barnes
Index 389