The Dictionary of Human Geography

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(3) Third, contrapuntal geographies require
reading from multiple sites and points of
view: not only from the point of view of
the dominantdiscoursebut also from
the perspective of subaltern knowledges
(cf. Featherstone, 2005a: see alsosubal-
tern studies).

Contrapuntal geographies have been invoked
to wire the discourse ofterrorismandsecur-
itymobilized by the USA in its ‘war on terror’
in Afghanistan and Iraq to heightened Israeli
military action in occupied Palestine (Gregory,
2004) and to campaigns by the Hindu Right
against Muslims in India (Oza, 2007): like
Said’s original proposal, both studies revealed
the reactivation of colonial tropes to charac-
terize ‘the common enemy’.
Other projects have been directed towards
similar ends without invoking Said: Gilroy’s
(1993) ‘Black Atlantic’ is one, particularly
prominent example of a transnational spatial
formation composed through an intricate inter-
play of connection anddifference.Saidhim-
self preferred demonstration to theoretical
elaboration, but inhuman geographythere
have been several attempts to develop a more
insistently materialist theorization of these
ideas. Thus Katz (2001a) substituted a carto-
graphic metaphor – acountertopography–for
Said’s musical one:

I want to imagine a politics that maintains
the distinctiveness of a place while recogniz-
ing that it is connected analytically to other
places along contour lines that represent
not elevation but particular relations to a
process (e.g. globalizing capitalist relations
of production). This offers a multifaceted
way of theorizing the connectedness of
vastly different places made artifactually dis-
crete by virtue of history and geography but
which also reproduce themselves differently
amidst the common political-economic and
socio-cultural processes they experience.
This notion oftopographyinvolves a par-
ticular precision and specificity that connects
distant places and in so doing enables
the inference of connection in uncharted
places in between. .. Such connections
are precise analytical relationships not
homogenizations. Not all places affected
by capital’s global ambition are affected
the same way. .. The larger intent is to
produce countertopographies that link
different places analytically and thereby
enhance struggles in the name of common
interests. (Katz, 2001a, pp. 1229–30)

These geographies are in constant and often
disjunctive motion, and Sheppard (2002)
borrowed the concept of a wormhole from
relativity theory to accentuate the complex
topologiesinvolved:

The positionality of two places should
be measured not by the physical distance
separating them, but by the intensity and
nature of their interconnectedness. .. Like
networks, wormholes leapfrog across space,
creating topological connections that reduce
the separation between distant places and
reshape their positionality ... Wormholes
are a structural effect of the long historical
geography of globalization, reflective of how
globalization processes reshape space/time.
The existence of such wormholes may
also have highly asymmetric consequences
for the places that are connected .. .’
(Sheppard, 2002, pp. 323–4)

Whatever vocabulary is preferred, however,
mapping these volatile geographies involves
more than acartography of connections:
the implication of differentials and differences
in time–space is vital (cf.power-geometry).
And Said’s original metaphor conveys an
equally crucial sense of dynamics: of move-
ment, variation and change. dg

conurbation A term coined by Patrick
Geddes (1854–1932) to describe a built-up
area created through the coalescence of two
or more once-separate settlements, probably
initiated throughribbon developmentalong
the main inter-urban routes. With greater
urban sprawl the term has largely been
replaced by terms such asmegalopolis,met-
ropolitan area and metropolitan labour
area, in which the built-up area may be discon-
tinuous. rj

convergence, regional The tendency for
regional incomes or levels of living within a
country to become more equal over time.
That this should be the case is a prediction
derived from neo-classical economics,
which portrays labour,capitaland otherfac-
tors of productionmoving from oneregion
to another seeking the best possible returns
(in the form of wages or profits), until there
is nothing to gain from further movement
because returns are the same in all regions.
Thus a competitive free-market economy
undercapitalismshould tend towards regional
equality, subject to constraints on the spatial
mobility of factors of production.

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_C Final Proof page 114 31.3.2009 9:45pm

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