Cultural Geography
within geography, and to harness geographic information systems (GIS) in the effort to better understand human–animal relations. ...
voices with authority to speak on behalf of animals, over specified domains; such voices should include lay people, non-experts ...
3 Sauer co-organized a Yale University conference on the destructive environmental impacts of develop- ment, published as Man’s ...
Cansdale, G.S. (1952) Animals and Man. London: Hutchison. Carter, J. (1997) ‘Nest-site selection and breeding success of wedge-t ...
Haraway, D. (1991) Simians, Cyborgs and Women. New York: Routledge. Harris, D.R. (1962) ‘The distribution and ancestry of the do ...
Renfrew, C. (1983) ‘Geography, archaeology and environment 1: archaeology’, The Geographical Journal149: 316–23. Robbins, P. (19 ...
Woods, M. (2000) ‘Fantastic Mr Fox? Representing animals in the hunting debate’, in C. Philo and C. Wilbert (eds) Animal Spaces, ...
This chapter opens up a number of questions regarding human and non-human relations. The focus is on landscape practices, which ...
politics of inhabitation. More schematically, the argument pursued here relies on two forms of politics. First, there is a polit ...
prehistorical first nature that inhabits Cronon’s (1991) writing of Chicago (if not his later collective work, see Cronon, 1996, ...
Cronon is well aware of the need to avoid this universal nature at the same time as wanting to hold onto the political project o ...
a second set of general responses to the landscape question. As the title of their book, Reframing Deforestation, suggests, land ...
3 Finally, representation is illustrative: the world and its narratives are already in existence, they simply require depiction ...
and Duncan, 1992). And the power of the analytic of the textuality of landscape potentially resides in its foregrounding of the ...
The extratextual matter of this production of landscape is made clear in Willems-Braun’s account of the nineteenth-century geolo ...
re-emerges in admittedly politically useful ways – as I have accepted, such readings are strategi- cally useful in terms of re-p ...
something or some process is outside the inscribing and de-scribing of text – moments that are ‘underdetermined’ by the current ...
want to pursue here. For now, the idea that we need more rather than fewer texts (or articulations of propositions) in order to ...
or being supplemented with other topologies. The point is to open analyses to those aspects of landscaping and other forms of or ...
Together, Massey, Hetherington and Lee provide important reminders of the limits to representa- tional politics. Landscape polit ...
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