The Dictionary of Human Geography

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mediation that is required to explain why
exchange occurs yields equivocal answers: all
we can categorically say is that finite availability
of a thing intimeandspaceand actual or
anticipated social use-value are general under-
lying conditions for exchange.
Gifts are a subset of exchange. They involve
neither mediation by money nor barter. But
like these more conventional forms of transac-
tions, they supply individuals with incentives
to collaborate in a pattern of exchanges that
performatively reproduce society and validate
the status of participants as social beings.
InThe gift: the form and reason for exchange in
archaic societies (1990 [1925]), the French
scholar Marcel Mauss built on the ideas of
Emile Durkheim to show how gifts function
as a mechanism by which individual interests
combine to make a socialsystem– a ‘gift
economy’ – in the absence of market exchange.
Because the gift is embedded in the economic,
moral, religious, political and aesthetic dimen-
sions, Mauss termed it a ‘Total social phe-
nomenon’. Mauss’ essay has been extended
in generative ways by social anthropologists
such as Claude Le ́vi-Strauss, Mary Douglas,
Pierre Bourdieu and Marilyn Strathern in their
efforts to identify non-market logics that
cementsociety. It goes without saying that
the gift economy, far from being an archaic
social mechanism, remains a constitutive force
in contemporary market societies. vg


Suggested reading
Appadurai (1986); Bourdieu (1990); Davis
(1992); Mauss (1990 [1925]); Polanyi (1972).


exclave A small piece of astatethat is phys-
ically separate from its main territorial body
but remains within its political jurisdiction
despite being surrounded by theterritory
of another state. Robinson (1959) identified
five exclave types by degree of separation from
thehomeland:normal, as per the definition
above;pene-, territories barely connected to
the main state in such a way that access must
occur via another state’s territory;quasi-, tech-
nically disconnected but connected in prac-
tical terms; temporary, as the result of an
armistice; andvirtual, areas treated as exclaves
without meeting the strict legal definition.
(See alsoenclave.) cf


Suggested reading
Aalto (2002); Robinson (1959).


existentialism A philosophy that flour-
ished in the middle to late twentieth century


as a radical defence of human freedom. It
emerged partly in reaction toteleological
and deterministic theories of human nature
that saw human beings as determined by their
biology, by the environments in which they
found themselves, or by their social status or
economic position. It also emerged in direct
response to the racialized ideologies andgeo-
politicsof a colonial (seecolonialism) and
cold warworld. Against notions of human
subjects, peoples andculturesdetermined
by their ‘nature’, constrained by their ‘essence’
or being the mere ‘bearers’ of their class func-
tions, existentialism argued that human beings
were free subjects, whose existence defined
who and what they were. For Heidegger (1962
[1927]), the ‘essence’ of this finitesubject,this
‘being-in-the-world’, was that it was thrown
into a world not of its own making and radically
oriented to this world through projects, mood,
will and other dispositions. Theontologyof
finitude was, for the existential subject, a life to
be lived, with ‘no-exit’ but death and along the
way a profound anxiety and, at times, dread in
the face of the individual’s immense responsi-
bility for his or her own life.
Existentialism emerged in human geog-
raphyin the 1970s, as part of a desire to re-
focus geographical enquiry away from the
reductive abstractions of spatial analysis
and structuralmarxism. It focused on the cap-
acities ofhuman agency, and in so doing
sought to be a corrective to the overly essen-
tialist arguments of muchculturalandhis-
torical geography(seeessentialism), to the
structural arguments ofpolitical economy
and to the abstractions ofspatial science.It
focused on how human beings at once live in
and make thespaces, placesandlandscapes
that they inhabit (Samuels, 1978, 1981). Far
from being an abstract science of spatial rela-
tions, existential geographies were concrete
descriptions of everyday lifeworlds, and
were engaged with theethicsandvaluesof
what human beings understand to be the
meaning of their lives and worlds (Entrikin,
1976; Tuan, 1976b; Relph, 1981, pp. 187–91).
Radical geographers have been sceptical of
existentialism, tending to see it as overly
focused on the subjective experiences of indi-
viduals; a kind ofidealismthat treated lived
experience (with its anxieties and feelings of
loss, uncertainty or dread) as indicative of a
universal condition of existence instead of a
concrete situation produced by a historical
and oppressivesociety. In Marcuse’s (1972,
p. 161) view, by hypothesizing determinate
historical conditions of human existence as

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