Cultural Geography
adopt what Deleuze characterized as a ‘looser kind of sense’ (Rajchman, 2000: 8). The most important lesson here is that, despit ...
sensation’ that one extracts from common perceptions and personalized affects, or from the space of repre- sentation and the re- ...
that have been set for them (with disastrous results: see Hinchliffe, 2001, on the BSE crisis). The challenge for intellectual a ...
Europe). Indeed, geographies of seeing are rarely so bounded or neat: for an interesting cross- and transcul- tural approach to ...
Hawthorne, W.D. (1996) ‘Holes and the sum of parts in the Ghanaian forest: regeneration, scale and sustainable use. Proceedings ...
Newman, F. and Holzman, L (1997) The End of Knowing. London: Routledge. Olwig, K. (1993) ‘Sexual cosmology: nation and land- sca ...
Landslides(Photo: Alex S. MacLean, reproduced with permission of the photographer) Section-4.qxd 03-10-02 10:36 AM Page 226 ...
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTIES Landscape is not the exclusive property of cultural geography. Like many Handbook topics, landscape has ...
there is nevertheless a value in attending to the particular perspectives which proceed from differently situated academic knowl ...
Meinig, 1979) and earlier ‘aesthetic geographer’ Vaughan Cornish (Matless, 1996), Jackson’s work indicates that the engagement o ...
(Braun, 2000), and to social historical studies which stress the spatial knowledges and prac- tices of workers within wider cult ...
also be at the heart of contests over it, and one thereby gains purchase on the topic by inhabiting its slippery nature. The pow ...
Hartshorne, R. (1939) The Nature of Geography.Lancaster: Association of American Geographers. Hirsch, E. and O’Hanlon, M. (eds) ...
Dialectical thought arises because it is less and less possible to ignore the fact that civilization, in the very act of realizi ...
Such conditions clearly are not the result of a lack of laws and regulations. At least since 1913 when the California Legislatur ...
beautiful) no less than the upward mobility of professionals like my parents. It is tempting, therefore, to see the California l ...
Concurrently, fresh strawberry production has become spatially concentrated: California pro- duction is now almost completely (9 ...
cross the border have been pushed deeper into the mountains and desert. And even further from the field, economic restructuring ...
In California agricultural commodity production, however, this metaphor of dead labor needs to be understood in more than metaph ...
as behind a commodity, is human labor – the intentional practices and social relationships that makeit (Mitchell, 1995). To unde ...
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