Cultural Geography
The categories we use to divide the world and its peoples are usually represented as uncontrover- sial and commonsensical. ‘Asia ...
CULTURAL GEOGRAPHIES OF RACIALIZATION 301 discussion of the spatial patterns and cultural symbolisms of non-white residence with ...
almost all nongeographers – continue to treat it, not only as a fully-fledged continent, but as the archetypal continent’ (1997: ...
settlement and residential segregation. More specifically, analysis of the spatial segregation of minority groups from majority ...
1988b; 1991b; Keith and Pile, 1993; Back and Keith, 1999). This work focuses on the way that those areas of London ‘associated w ...
Anderson isolates two competing discourses that have racialized Redfern. The first emerges from ‘Aboriginal rights’ arguments th ...
The white middle class young people, who lived in upmarket commuter villages, were the least localist in orientation and had ver ...
the term ‘black’ has functioned to exclude different ethnic minority groups from the UK policy debate, as his example of South A ...
Scholars in geography are also now beginning to critically investigate whiteness, though mainly from a representational, feminis ...
to recast their gaze from cosmopolitan locales such as Kilburn High Road to ‘Middle England’ and other less marked zones of ethn ...
challenge to the familiar colonial role of ‘racial studies’ (as supplier of anthropological informa- tion on colonial subjects) ...
Gogwilt, C. (1995) The Invention of the West: Joseph Conrad and the Double-Mapping of Europe and Empire. Stanford: Stanford Univ ...
Nayak, A. (2002) ‘Last of the ‘Real Geordies’?: white masculinities and the subcultural response to deindus- trialisation’, Envi ...
During the last quarter-century, disciplinary orthodoxies in geography have been subject to devastating criticisms, leaving geog ...
closet to cyberspace and from the individual to the globe. Finally, we imagine several new queer geographies that have yet to be ...
human geography as a whole) led to a proliferation of geographical sexuality studies that were theoretically anti-structuralist, ...
little or nothing, in a practical political sense, to undermine either heterosexual hegemony or the ‘tyranny’ of heterosexually– ...
both politically and for its ability (potentially) to provoke learning (or ‘unlearning’,^6 as the case may be). Perhaps the olde ...
gay and lesbian travelers, and experiencing a queer unity in diversity through traversing the globe as ‘gay’. But clearly there ...
if not explicit, in cultural constructs. We think it crucial, therefore, that cultural geographers be open to exploring this dim ...
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