Cultural Geography
for example, a thingrather than a process). Not surprisingly, then, the way in which ‘culture’ is seen as evolving spatially in ...
heterosexuality is in fact an enormously diverse set of practices and relations that can even include (seemingly contradictorily ...
discussion of Bell et al., 1994, above), but overall we see them as broadening and enriching activist scholarship. We have also ...
Brown, M. (2000) Closet Space: Geographies of Metaphor from the Body to the Globe. London: Routledge. Butler, J. (1990) Gender T ...
Leap, B. (forthcoming) Gay City. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Levine, M. (1979) ‘Gay ghetto’, Journal of Homosexu ...
LOCATING GENDER This chapter examines gender as an aspect of subjectivity that is both taken for granted and extraordinarily elu ...
The differentiation of human beings by gender is so powerful and pervasive that it is very diffi- cult to imagine (or write abou ...
the political tensions around its theorization. We aim to explore important aspects of such debates by organizing our remarks in ...
feminist versions of this tradition, what women and men share by virtue of their common human- ity is of much greater importance ...
powerful gender inscriptions, men and women put their masculine or feminine cultural creden- tials in question through their mer ...
of gender and class interests, in the service of which spaces are defined and redefined. This analysis illustrates how accounts ...
spaces, thereby ‘correcting’ a profound substantive and conceptual neglect. A small number of stud- ies focus on women-only livi ...
sharp and stimulating contrast between existing and aspirational social and symbolic orders. Lucy Sargisson writes that such tex ...
For example, there are many different ways of being ‘women’ or ‘men’. Indeed as soon as adjectives are added we imagine ‘women’ ...
dimensions of the spatiality of daily lives, emphasizing how the ‘imagined geographies’ of employers and workers combine with wo ...
‘tie down’ its meaning once and for all. For, as Wittgenstein makes plain, it is not ‘always an advantage to replace an indistin ...
imprecision for which we have argued suggests an inherent ambiguity and a necessary fuzziness about gender and other categories. ...
their actions are restricted and censured accord- ingly. ‘Heavily’ pregnant women in particular are seriously discouraged from e ...
relations between (gendered) people and places. It is thus well placed to reveal something of the nature of this ‘betweenness’, ...
to generate creative ways of thinking about spaces and subjectivities. NOTE 1 The first person plural is an ambiguous form of ad ...
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