The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

Comp. by: VPugazhenthi Stage : Revises1 ChapterID: 9781405132879_4_N Date:31/
3/09 Time:15:13:06 Filepath:H:/00_Blackwell/00_3B2/Gregory-9781405132879/appln/
3B2/revises/9781405132879_4_N.3d


Alongsidespaceandplace, the question of
nature is one of the most central and enduring
of geographical concerns (Fitzsimmons, 1989).
As every undergraduate knows, geography
stakes its disciplinary identity on being uniquely
concerned with the interface between natural
environments and human cultures. Nowhere is
this better epitomized than in the work of Carl
Ortwin Sauer in the 1920s and the legacy of
theberkeley school, with its emphasis on
cultural landscapein which ‘culture is the
agent [and] the natural area the medium’
(Sauer, 1963b [1925], p. 343). However, even
here, it is evident that this definitive geograph-
ical concern has tended to be cast in terms that
engage the world as if it were already divided
up into things belonging either to nature or to
culture, a division entrenched in the very
fabric of the discipline and reinforced by the
sometimes faltering conversation between
human and physical geographers (seegeo-
graphy;physical geography).
In consequence, as human geographers set
about trafficking between nature and culture,
a fundamental asymmetry in the treatment of
things assigned to these categories has been
smuggled in to the enterprise. Geographies,
like histories, become stories of exclusively
human achievement played out over, and
through, a seemingly indifferent medium of
matter and objects made up of everything
else. Such stories percolate through diverse
currents inhuman geography. These include
marxistaccounts which advance the appar-
ently contradictory idea of the ‘production
of nature’, arguing that more and more of
the things we are accustomed to think of as
natural – fromresourcestolandscapes–
have increasingly become refashioned as the
products of human labour (e.g. Mitchell,
1996; Gandy, 2002). Such accounts identify
this intensifying social capacity to produce
nature assecond nature, a distinct phase in
the historical development of nature–culture
relations that supersedes its original or
‘God-given’ state –first nature(Smith, 1990).
Equally, they include cultural accounts that
explorepostmoderntheories to understand
better the ways in which our ways of seeing
nature are always mediated and shaped by
representational practices and devices – from
cartographic surveys to wildlife film-making (e.
g. Wilson, 1992). These accounts emphasize
the politics ofrepresentation, recognizing
that representational processes are instrumen-
tal in constituting our sense of what the natural
world is like, rather than merely a mirror image
of a fixed external reality. In consequence, such

accounts suggest, multiple and often incom-
patible representations of the same natural
phenomena or event can and do coexist (e.g.
Cosgrove and Daniels, 1988).
Whether their emphasis has been on
nature’s material transformation or on its
changing meaning, these are geographies
whose only subject or active inhabitants are
people, while everything else is consigned to
nature and becomes putty in our hands. In
this, human geography’s long march from
environmental determinismtosocial con-
structionismseems to have brought us to the
same place as that identified by the environ-
mentalist Bill McKibben as the ‘end of nature’
(see Castree, 2005a). Thishumaniststance is
premised on two working assumptions (see
humanism). The first is that the collective
‘us’ of human society is somehow always al-
ready removed from the rest of the world, for
only by placing ita prioriat a distance can
human society be (re)connected to everything
else on such asymmetrical terms as those be-
tween producer and product, or viewer and
view (Ingold, 2000). The second is that in
different ways the generative energies of the
Earth itself, in rivers, soils, weather and oceans
and the living plants and creatures assigned to
‘nature’, are effectively evacuated from the
terms of these analyses (Haraway, 1991c).
Such assumptions do not square with the an-
guish and infrastructure of existential concern
that characterize the twenty-first century. In
unimaginable and unforeseen ways, the force-
fulness of all manner of things has come to
make itself felt in our social lives and political
agendas. From climate change to mad cow
disease, there is a growing sense that our
worldlyinteractionswith,and indifference to,
more-than-human forces and entities are
returning to haunt us. Since the last edition
of thisDictionary was published (2000), a
major thrust of work in human, particularly
cultural, geography has been to challenge
these premises and rethink the ‘human’, and
the status of the ‘non-human’, in the fabric of
human geography (Whatmore, 2002b).
Much of this work has drawn inspiration
frompost-structuralist philosophies rela-
tively new to geography, through intermediar-
ies such as science and technology studies
(STS) (see Hinchliffe, 2007). The argument
advanced here is that what we are experien-
cing is less a ‘crisis of nature’ and more a ‘crisis
ofobjectivity’, in which the things ascribed
to nature are refusing to stay passively in their
boxes and are assuming their irrepressible
part in the possibilities and achievements of

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_N Final Proof page 493 31.3.2009 3:13pm Compositor Name: ARaju

NATURE
Free download pdf