**Named a 2014 Choice Outstanding Academic Title**
Combining coverage of key themes and debates from a variety of historical and theoretical perspectives, this authoritative reference volume offers the most up-to-date and substantive analysis of cultural geography currently available.
- A significantly revised new edition covering a number of new topics such as biotechnology, rural, food, media and tech, borders and tourism, whilst also reflecting developments in established subjects including animal geographies
- Edited and written by the leading authorities in this fast-developing discipline, and features a host of new contributors to the second edition
- Traces the historical evolution of cultural geography through to the very latest research
- Provides an international perspective, reflecting the advancing academic traditions of non-Western institutions, especially in Asia
- Features a thematic structure, with sections exploring topics such as identities, nature and culture, and flows and mobility
قائمة المحتويات
Notes on Contributors ix
1 Introduction 1
Nuala C. Johnson, Richard H. Schein, and Jamie Winders
Theoretical Dispatches 15
2 Postcolonialism 17
Tariq Jazeel
3 Poststructuralism 23
John Paul Jones III
4 Feminist Theory 29
Mary E. Thomas and Patricia Ehrkamp
5 Materialities 32
Hayden Lorimer
6 Affect 36
Deborah Dixon and Elizabeth R. Straughan
7 Historical Materialism 39
Don Mitchell
Foundations 43
8 Cultural Geography in Practice 45
Catherine Nash
9 Critical “Race” Approaches 57
Audrey Kobayashi
10 Gender 73
Geraldine Pratt and Berrak Çavlan Erengezgin
11 Social Class: Position, Place, Culture, and Meaning 88
Linda Mc Dowell
12 Geographies of Sexualities: The Cultural Turn and After 105
Natalie Oswin
13 Place 118
Patricia L. Price
14 Nationalism 130
John Agnew
15 Object Lessons: From Batholith to Bookend 146
Caitlin De Silvey
Landscapes 159
16 Economic Landscapes 161
Niall Majury
17 Political Landscapes 173
Nuala C. Johnson
18 Landscapes of Memory and Socially Just Futures 186
Derek H. Alderman and Joshua F.J. Inwood
19 Consumption and Landscape 198
Mona Domosh
20 Landscape and Justice 209
Tom Mels and Don Mitchell
21 Rural Landscapes 225
Paul Cloke
22 Seeing Seeing Seeing the Legal Landscape 238
David Delaney
23 Aging 250
Elizabeth A. Gagen
24 Children/Youth 264
Meghan Cope
25 Urban Landscapes 278
Tim Bunnell
26 Domesticities 290
Robyn Dowling and Emma R. Power
Natures/Cultures 305
27 Choosing Metaphors for the Anthropocene: Cultural and Political Ecologies 307
Paul Robbins
28 Biotechnologies and Biomedicine 320
Bronwyn Parry
29 Animal Geographies 332
Jamie Lorimer and Krithika Srinivasan
30 Food‘s Cultural Geographies: Texture, Creativity, and Publics 343
Ian Cook, Peter Jackson, Allison Hayes-Conroy, Sebastian Abrahamsson, Rebecca Sandover, Mimi Sheller, Heike Henderson, Lucius Hallett, Shoko Imai, Damian Maye, and Ann Hill
31 Environmental Histories 355
Robert M. Wilson
32 Science Wars 371
David N. Livingstone
Circulations/Networks/Fixities 385
33 From Global Dispossession to Local Repossession: Towards a Worldly Cultural Geography of Occupy Activism 387
Matthew Sparke
34 Political Moves: Cultural Geographies of Migration and Difference 409
Rachel Silvey
35 Mappings 423
Jeremy W. Crampton
36 Landscape, Locative Media, and the Duplicity of Code 437
Andrew Boulton and Matthew Zook
37 Affect and Emotion 452
Ben Anderson
38 Tourism 465
Chris Gibson
39 Borders and Border-Crossings 478
Anssi Paasi
40 The Imperial Present: Geography, Imperialism, and its Continued Effects 494
John Morrissey
41 Postcolonialism 508
Declan Cullen, James Ryan, and Jamie Winders
Index 524
عن المؤلف
Nuala C. Johnson is a Reader in Geography at Queen’s University Belfast, UK. An historical geographer with research interests that include the relationships between identity politics, memory and representation, as well as the role of aesthetics in the making of scientific spaces. Dr Johnson is the author of Nature Displaced, Nature Displayed: Order and Beauty in Botanical Gardens (2011); Ireland, the Great War and the Geography of Remembrance (2003); and she is editor of Culture and Society (2008).
Richard H. Schein is Professor of Geography at the University of Kentucky, where he also is a member of the Committee on Social Theory and the American Studies Faculty. He is a cultural and historical geographer interested in the place of land and landscape in the processes of everyday life. His work often is focused on the racialized US south, and especially in urban settings. He is the editor of Landscape and Race in United States (2006).
Jamie Winders is Associate Professor in Geography at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, USA. An urban social geographer with a focus on social theory and qualitative methods, she has published widely in geography and related fields on international migration, racial politics, urban governance, postcolonial theory, pedagogy, and historical geography.