The Dictionary of Human Geography

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the industrialization of Alsace-Lorraine to the
wider geopolitical structures of France as a
whole and,en passant, to challenge the legitim-
acy of its post-1871 occupation by Germany.
Recent attempts to situate regional forma-
tions and transformations as constellations or
condensations within more extensive networks
have been far more attentive to such concerns
and in the 1980s and 1990s many of them were
given a considerable fillip byworld-systems
theory and the analysis of the capi-
talist world-economy (see, e.g., Agnew,
1987b; Dixon, 1991; Becker and Egler,
1992). These projects were distinguished by
a much greater sense of historicity – ofplace
and region as historically contingent process
(Pred, 1984; Gilbert 1988) – which in turn
made the ‘bounded spaces’ and ‘building
blocks’ofconventionalregionalgenresseem
much less solid. To talk in this way is not
merely to invoke Marx’s description of capit-
alistmodernityas a world in which ‘all that
is solid melts into air’, important though that
is, because the tensions between ‘fixity’ and
‘motion’ that spasmodically interrupt and
restructure regional formations are not the
exclusive preserve ofcapitalism,andarehence
not contained by its history alone. Our present
understanding ofregions suggeststhatthey have
never been closed, cellular, bounded spaces:
indeed,muchof‘traditional’regionalgeography
may turn out to have been about inventing a
‘traditional’ world of supposedly immobile,
introspective and irredeemably localized cul-
tures. Many anthropologists, geographers, his-
toriansandothersnowacceptthatnon-capitalist
worlds havealsoalwaysbeen actively engaged in
other worlds, and that they have also always
been constituted through their involvement in
trans-local and trans-regional networks.
In order to develop historical geographies of
regional (trans)formation that are open to
these possibilities, it is not enough to locate
regions within progressively larger global
frameworks or to identify the ‘regional’ as
one level within an interlocking system of dif-
ferentscales. One of the persistent difficulties
of such approaches is that regions become
products of processes that are located ‘on the
outside’ – in the absolute spaces of the con-
taining frameworks and coordinate systems –
so that regions become surfaces that merely
register the impacts of globalization,of
successive rounds of capitalaccumulation
or thedivision of labour, or of cycles of
time–space compression that are seen as
enframing them. Against these ways of figur-
ing the world, many scholars now argue that

such processes are also ‘on the inside’ –
indeed, that the demarcations between ‘out-
side’ and ‘inside’ are deeply problematic
and made more so by what Hardt and Negri
(2000, pp. 194–5) call ‘Empire’, where ‘the
modern dialectic of inside and outside has
been replaced by a play of degrees and inten-
sities, of hybridities and artificiality’. Whatever
one makes of this particular thesis, there is a
broad consensus within human geography
that regional formations are more or less
impermanent condensations of institutions
and objects, people and practices that are
intimately involved in the operation and out-
come of local, trans-local and trans-regional
processes. For much the same reason, even
though the ‘regional’ has constantly been
hypostatized as the quintessential scale of
geographical analysis, many writers have
become much more attentive to the ways in
which these scalar distinctions have been
historically produced. It is through these pro-
ductions, at once material and discursive, that
regional structures have become sedimented
in imaginative geographies, in material land-
scapes, and inpublic policy.
The theorization of regional formations as
partial, porous, hybrid condensations of
entangled networks between human and non-
human actants, each of different spans and
with inconstant geometries, raises difficult
questions ofrepresentation. How are these
ideas and concepts to be redeemed in the
fabrication of regional accounts? Part of the
problem concerns the need to find ways of
conveying these theoretical constructs in
empirical solution: as Pudup (1988) observed,
‘Anyone trying to mesh theory with empirical
description [in regional geography] soon learns
that movement among abstract concepts and
empirical description is like performing ballet
on a bed of quicksand’ (see also Sayer, 1989).
To some writers, the metaphor of dance subse-
quently seemed peculiarly appropriate: one
implication ofnon-representational theory
is that all human geographies need to become
much more physically sensuous, much more
expressive in their poetics. In the specific case
of regional geography, there is clearly much to
learn from careful, critical readings of imagina-
tiveliterature,filmand video, and from con-
temporary travel accounts that have tried to find
the terms for the complex interpenetrations of
cultures: what Iyer (1989) epigrammatically
described as ‘Video night in Kathmandu’ (cf.
transculturation). In doing so, authors have
wrestled with some of the same demons that
haunted traditional regional geography, and

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REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY
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