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between people that is mediated by images’
(thesis 29). urbanism takes on particular
importance within the spectacle as a technique
for reshapingspaceand ensuring the separ-
ation between people, although it is also a
terrain within which struggles against the spec-
tacle and for different relationships between
people are forged.
As developed by Debord and thesituation-
ists, the concept of the spectacle was part of a
revolutionary project and was meant to be a
weapon with which to harm spectacular soci-
ety. This has not prevented it from being
widely adopted within cultural, media and
urban studies seeking to characterize a new
cultural and mediatized era, and becoming ‘a
stock phrase in a wide range of critical and
not-so-critical discourses’ (Crary, 1989,
p. 97). Yet emphasizing its original analytical
force, the groupRETORT(2005) insists that
Debord’s account speaks powerfully to a cur-
rent ‘new age ofwar’, in which struggles over
images and the capitaliststate’s concern with
the rule of appearances are of vital political
significance. dp
Suggested reading
Debord (1994 [1967]).
spontaneous settlement Aresidentialarea
developed outside the formal economy by its
inhabitants, often after illegally occupying
the land, and usually found in developing coun-
tries. Both the housing andinfrastructure
of public facilities are constructed outside the
usual market and public service mechanisms.
Although the term ‘spontaneous’ suggests
no forethought or planning, many such clandes-
tine settlements are the result of ‘planned inva-
sions’ by the initial occupants, who subdivide
the land on a pre-arranged cadastre and provide
a basic infrastructure (cf.squatting). rj
Suggested reading
Lloyd (1979).
sport(s) human geography has paid
increased attention to sports partly as a result
of the increased economic and cultural
importance given to issues ofleisureandrec-
reation, but most especially because insights
from cultural theory have been brought to
bear on the performance of sports. Studies
commonly take one of five approaches:
(1) The plotting of the economic connec-
tions and organizations of sports. This
follows the fortunes of ‘mega-events’
such as the Olympics or soccer World
Cup, and their linkage to patterns of
urban development, or the competition
over sport club franchises and stadia
location.
(2) Thediffusionand location of different
sports across the globe. This tracks the
relative popularity and adoption of dif-
ferent games, often as a cultural form in
berkeley school approaches to cul-
tural geography.
(3) The development and often hybridiza-
tion of these sports in a colonial and post-
colonial world (seecolonialism;hybrid-
ity;post-colonialism). They become
examples of contestation of meaning and
adoption of cultural practices. Thus the
imposition of cricket ovals across South
Asia, its enthusiastic adoption and the
transport of the game to the West Indies
are used by C.L.R. James in hisBeyond a
boundaryto suggest that it offers both in-
sights into colonizing cultures and a styl-
ization of resistance to that process. The
postwar adoption of baseball in Japan also
offers moments of cultural contact, under-
standing and transformation.
(4) Ahistorical geographyof the emer-
gence and role of sports in varying social
milieu. The rise of organized mass spec-
tator sports alongside industrializa-
tion, complementing or even replacing
other modes of regulation, is important
here, as is the construction of progres-
sively more homogenized fields, arenas
and venues as forms of abstract space.
The rapid mediatization of team sport
and the culture of viewing has been re-
lated to the society of thespectacle,
where a televisual temporality and
dramatization is now driving sport.
(5) Theemergenceonandoffthepitchoftech-
niques of thebodythat form exemplars of
disciplinary powerand the mobilization
andchannellingofcollectiveaffecttocre-
ate anemotional geographyof support,
loyalty, joy and suffering. The surging
crowd at a game, or indeed around a large
screen, enact changingperformancesof
emotionality,raceandgender. Alterna-
tively, the body cultures inrecreations
and outdoor sports offer new ways to
thinkaboutpeople’smodesofengagement
with landscape. mc
Suggested reading
Bale (2002); Cronin and Bale (2002); James
(2005); Roche (2000); Smart (2007).
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