The Dictionary of Human Geography

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geometry viatransportation studies came
networksand graph theory. And from the
philosophy and history ofsciencecame a
model of ‘the structure of scientific revolu-
tions’ (seeparadigm) that could be used, rhet-
orically at least, to legitimize the quantitative
revolution as a genuinely scientific revolution.
In the process the dominant stream of research
in human geography moved from a field-
based, craft-form of enquiry to a technical,
desk-bound one, where places were analysed
from afar.
Peter Gould (1978), one of the revolution-
aries, labelled the era of the quantitative revo-
lution, ‘The Augean period’, after the mythic
Augean stables that – after thirty years of neg-
lect – were cleaned all of a piece by Hercules.
Equating quantitative revolutionaries with
Hercules and an earlier non-quantitative geog-
raphy with the Augean stables speaks to at
least two sociological processes marking the
revolution. (1) The heroic depiction points to
the quantitative revolution’s profoundmascu-
linism(and, arguably, to itswhitenesstoo).
Initial proponents and expositors were all
men; there were virtually no substantive stud-
ies of women; and the disembodied, totalizing
knowledge produced was phallocentric (see
phallocentrism: see also situated know-
ledge). (2) The cleansingmetaphorindicates
how desperately keen revolutionaries were to
quarantine themselves from the past. Partly
this was intellectual, but, as Taylor (1976)
argues, it was also for internal sociological
reasons. To move ahead, to secure early pro-
motion and status, it was necessary to do
something different. For a group of very
bright, young, ambitious and competitive
male scholars, the quantitative revolution was
the perfect vehicle.
At some point in the late 1960s, or early
1970s, the grip of the quantitative revolution
on the discipline loosened. There are at least
two reasons. First, a different kind of world
was emerging that was more restless, and less
innocent than before. Great debates were hap-
pening around issues ofpoverty, civilrights,
the environment,genderand racial equality,
and war, but the quantitative revolution
seemed unable or unwilling to address them.
The ensuingrelevancedebate of the early
1970s left quantifiers flat-footed. As Harvey
(1973, p. 129) damningly put it, ‘There is an
ecological problem, an urban problem, an
international trade problem, and yet we seem
incapable of saying anything of depth or pro-
fundity about any of them. When we do say
something, it appears trite and slightly ludi-

crous. In short, our paradigm is not coping
well. It is ripe for overthrow.’ Second, an aca-
demic generation had passed since the first
quantifiers, and the time was ripe for change.
A new vocabulary was forged to mark off the
old from the new, in this case, one principally
derived frommarxism(Harvey, 1973). There
were other, immediate contenders too, includ-
ing ahumanistic geographythat sought to
develop human geography’s connections with
thehumanitiesrather than the social sciences.
But the important point, and why the quanti-
tative revolution remains a watershed in geo-
graphy’s recent history, is that Marxism and its
successor projects persisted with a theoretical
vocabulary. (It is as well to remember that the
humanities are every bit as ‘theoretical’ in their
sensibility as the social sciences.) Certainly the
meaning oftheoryaltered, as many different
avenues were explored, but the continuity of a
theoretical vocabulary has proven more im-
portant in subsequently shaping the discipline
than rupture. tb

Suggested reading
Barnes (2004).

queer theory A panoply of always-question-
ing and destabilizing theoretical and intellec-
tual movements that centre on the significance
and complexities of sexualities and genders. It
emerged in the 1990s (see de Lauretis, 1991)
within the humanities, but has travelled into
the social sciences, and so intohuman geo-
graphy. By its very nature, the term resists
being pinned down or essentialized. Above
all, queer theory draws on both senses of the
term ‘queer’. It refers both to an array of non-
normative sexualities and/or desires (lesbian/
gay/bisexual/pansexual/asexual/transsexual/
transgendered (seepsychoanalytic the-
ory), and invokes the sense of challenging
norms of sexuality by referencing the curi-
ous, odd or strange (de Lauretis, 1991;
Jagose, 1996).
Two uses of the term are apparent. First,
queer theory is used loosely to describe any
theoretically inflected work in gay and lesbian
studies. Using the term in such a way frus-
trates queer theorists who valorize the per-
spective’s unabashedly and relentless push to
critique. Second, and more precisely, as an
instance of post-structuralism andpost-
modernism, queer theoryepistemologically
challenges the ubiquity ofheteronormativity
(see homophobia and heterosexism). It
perpetually and relentlessly destabilizes our
quotidian ideas by rejecting any fixed or stable

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_Q Final Proof page 612 31.3.2009 7:14pm Compositor Name: ARaju

QUEER THEORY
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