The Dictionary of Human Geography

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the spread of the Internet, have both altered
the geographical experience of time and argu-
ably led to new geographical realities. To some
extent irrespective of geographical location,
the experience of simultaneity may be shared
by people living in most ‘core’ urban areas
of the world – and is used by stock market
traders on a 24/7 basis to further their eco-
nomic gains. us

Suggested reading
Adam (2006); May and Thrift (2001).

time-geography An approach to human
geographytreatingtime andspaceasre-
sourcesdirectly involved in the constitution
of social life. It was developed by the Swedish
geographer Torsten Ha ̈gerstrand and his asso-
ciates at the University of Lund during the
1960s and 1970s (Ha ̈gerstrand and
Lenntorp, 1974). Time-geography is not sup-
posed to be a theory, but rather anonto-
logical contribution focusing on how
different phenomena are mutually modified
because they coexist in time and space. As
such, Ha ̈gerstrand attributed a certainnatur-
alismto the approach, characterizing it as a
‘topoecology’ designated to grasp a society–
nature–technology constellation. He acknow-
ledged an affinity withphenomenologybut
still argued for a physical approach to the so-
cial world (Ha ̈gerstrand, 1982).
Time-geography was developed in relation
to empirical work and an intensive involvement
in Swedish planning. Its basic element is con-
nections between continuous trajectories of
individual entities in time–space. From these,
descriptive concepts were developed, such as
paths,stations,projects,prisms,time–space bundles
and time–space domains. They constitute a
world view on the human condition stating
that everybody is subject to confinement in
time–space within the limits formed by the
bounded capacity of individuals to engage in
more than one task at a time, by the speeds at
which it is possible to move and assemble indi-
viduals, tools and materials, and by regulations
of access and modes of conduct within do-
mains of local order. Most well-known is the
translation of this view into a non-linguistic
notation system representingpossibleconfigur-
ations in time–space (see figure). It proved a
useful tool in planning and was heavily used
also in earlyfeminist geographiesof time–
space constraints in women’s everyday life.
While time-geography’s representational po-
tential is widely acknowledged, its metaphysical
basis has been severely criticised. Two streams

of criticism have prevailed. One points to a
problematic relationship tosocial theory,
and especially how the naturalism or ‘physical-
ism’ of the approach leads to a defective con-
ception of human thought-and-action and
erodes the possibility of developing a social
understanding of time–space (Gregory,
1985). The other line of criticism charges
time-geography with masculinism (Rose,
1993). It regards time-geography as a visual
strategy that renders space objective and trans-
parent (seevision and visuality). Further-
more, the moving bodies of time-geography
are seen as ‘imaginary bodies’; ‘universal’ and
deprived of social and cultural markings of
‘race’,genderandsexuality.
Some geographers have sought to develop
more socialized versions of time-geography.
In the 1980s, these attempts often relied
upon a convergence withstructuration the-
ory. Perhaps the most prominent of these
attempts came from Allan Pred (e.g. 1986),
who studied agrarian and urban change in
nineteenth-century Sweden as an interaction
between social restructuring, everyday rou-
tines and the production of meaning. Since
the 1980s interest in time-geography has been
renewed on two levels. First, its descriptive
capacity has been developed through GIS-
based technologies and 3-D visualizations
of human activity patterns. Second, Ha ̈ger-
strand’s emphasis on encountering, events

time-geography Ha ̈gerstrand’s web model

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 756 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju

TIME-GEOGRAPHY
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