The Dictionary of Human Geography

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visible, especially within popular writing,
and it is hard to escape the restrictions of
the progressivist canon and its underlying pre-
sumptions. Academic cartographers continue
to pursue an internalist history, now recon-
figuring it to account for the new directions
being taken by digital technologies (Slocum,
McMaster, Kessler and Howard, 2008).
Intellectually, the future clearly lies with the
new catholic and critical history of cartog-
raphy; its challenge is to turn the older strains
of cartographic historiography to its own
ends, remaining empirically strong but con-
solidating a coherent and interdisciplinary
intellectual presence. mhe

Suggested reading
Edney (2005a); Harley (1987, 2001b); Jacob
(2006). See also http://maphistory.info/

case study The case study epitomizes apro-
cessor complex set of processes in context,
thereby demonstrating how theoretical tools
can be applied to the social world. The idea
of the case study emerged in the 1930s
through attempts to make the human sciences
a parallel enterprise to the biophysical sci-
ences, specifically in trying to see instanti-
ations of sociological theory in the manner of
medical case histories. Urban sociologists,
mainly from thechicago school, saw the
case study as the ideal method to produce
hypotheses. For instance, Whyte’sStreet corner
society(1943) is a classic case study of life,
gangs, work and politics in a working-class
Italian neighbourhood in Boston. By the late
1960s, the sociological approach of Grounded
Theory advocated building theory through
case studies, as a kind of stylized empiricism.
However, sociological thought has paid
much longer attention to what Max Weber
called ‘configurations’ of seemingly objective
regularities or hypothetical laws, which only
become intelligible in specific, concrete situ-
ations (Weber, 1949). Considered as a
Weberian configuration, the case study separ-
ates contingent from necessary causes and
context from structuring process, to show
how both elements come together in concrete
conjunctures. The Weberian approach,
it would seem, provides more durable analyt-
ical tools than some of its successors in urban
sociology.
Contemporary critiques from scholars such
as Dipesh Chakrabarty of the Subaltern
Studies Collective question the underlying pre-
sumption to objectify lived histories in cases
that conceal the translation of local into expert

knowledge (see subaltern studies). This
insight would suggest that as long as disciplin-
ary authority is itself part of the object of analy-
sis, case studies can remain efficacious in
engaging concrete interactions between expert
knowledges and forms of belonging. Such an
interactive conception of the case study is par-
ticularly useful from the perspective of a
human geographythat strives to show how
broader processes work through specific con-
stellations of social space. Through Massey’s
notion of an extroverted sense of place
(Massey, 1994b), one can conceive of ‘case
geographies’ as intersections of dynamic,
mobile, constructed and contested spatial pro-
cesses. Another constructive critique of case
studies emerges from Mary Poovey’s (1998)
interrogation of the boundaries between
descriptive and interpretive evidence in the
making of the modern fact. Poovey’s analysis
contrasts the kind of evidence that makes
for case studies against the seemingly non-
evaluative numerical and statistical indices that
surround such objects of evidence. The useful
insight in thinking of particular geographical
cases is to ask what work the division ofnomo-
theticandidiographicforms of knowledge
accomplishes in maintaining or undermining
the coherence of actual cases. sc

caste An endogamous social hierarchy of
enduring political significance, believed to
have emerged some 3500 years ago around
highly questionable categories of Aryans and
non-Aryans in the Indian subcontinent. The
former – comprisingbrahman,kshatriyaand
vaishya– emerged as dominant occupational
castes of so-called dvija (twice-born). The
shudracaste(s) – regarded as non-Aryan and
‘mixed’ – were occupationally marginalized
and racialized, as was also the case later with
the ‘outcastes’ (Dalit), whose touch was
deemed polluting (Thapar, 1966). This order
was challenged from the sixth centurybce,
but all major religions in India came to bear
the social imprint of caste. Brahman social
dominance was bolstered by a British neo-
Brahmanical rulingideology, and provoked
a backlash (Bose and Jalal, 1997).
Significantly, leaders such as Lohia analytic-
ally separated the high castes from women,
shudra, Dalit, Muslim andadivasi(‘indigen-
ous’) and underscored the political necessity
of marriages betweenshudraanddvija, while
disrupting the rift between manual and brain
work, which contributed to the formation,
rigidification and violence of caste. rn

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_C Final Proof page 72 31.3.2009 9:45pm

CASE STUDY
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