The Dictionary of Human Geography

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2005; Legg, 2007b; Ogborn, 2007). These
studies haveinvolveda closeandcriticalengage-
ment with various forms ofpost-colonialism.
The colonial project was largely concerned
with the acquisition and exploitation ofnat-
ural resources, and much of the new work
on historical geographies of colonialism has
focused on its environmental consequences.
This is scarcely an unheralded development
(Clark, 1949; Powell, 1988; Williams, 1989;
Donkin, 1999), since the relationship between
environmental history and historical
geography has always been extremely close,
particularly in the USA (Williams, 1994a).
However, recentenvironmentalismhas gen-
erated a more politically charged historical
geography that has explored the impact of
natural resource exploitation on regional and
urban development (Cronon, 1991), and
which includes explicitly Marxist historical
geographies on the interactions ofclass,race
and the physical environment in industrializing
regions (Mitchell, 1996; Walker, 2001).
Westernscience, including the science of
geography, was directly implicated in the
processes of agricultural and industrial trans-
formation, urbanization and imperial exp-
ansion that historical geographers have
increasingly investigated. This has prompted
a renewed interest in the critical history of
post-enlightenmentgeographical and envir-
onmental thought (Livingstone, 1992; Grove,
1995). Inspired in part by the writings of the
literary critic Edward Said, this work has em-
phasized the constitutive significance of geo-
graphical knowledge in the creation of national
and imperial identities (Smith and God-
lewska, 1994; Bell, Butlin and Heffernan,
1995; Driver, 2001a; Withers, 2001: see also
orientalism). It has also reconnected histor-
ical geography with the history of cartography
(seecartography, history of), particularly
through the seminal work of historical geog-
rapher J. Brian Harley (Harley, 2001b).
No single methodological or philosophical
orthodoxy has prevailed since the 1970s, and
historical geography has become increasingly
eclectic. This demonstrates the growing influ-
ence of perspectives from allied disciplines but
is also evidence of a wider ‘historicization’ of
human geography that has partially comprom-
ised historical geography’s status as a distinct-
ive sub-discipline (Driver, 1988). This has
generated some unease about sub-disciplinary
identity, notably in the debate about the legit-
imacy of the terms ‘historical geography’ and
‘geographical history’ (Baker, 2007). But for
all its thematic diversity, twenty-first-century

historical geography has become increasingly
focused on the (relatively) recent past, a trend
partly determined by the need for reliable,
spatially extensive data, but also influenced
by theinstrumentalistassumption that his-
torical research should have immediate rele-
vance to contemporary issues (Jones, 2004b).
That said, its continued vigour is demon-
strated in the pages of theJournal of Historical
Geographyand in the steady stream of innova-
tive work in historical geography that also ap-
pears in the pages of mainstream journals
inside and, crucially, outside geography. mh

Suggested reading
Baker (2003); Butlin (1993); Harris (1991);
Morrissey, Whelan and Yeoh (2008).

historical materialism The materialist con-
ception of history, formulated by Karl Marx
(1818–83) with Friedrich Engels (1820–95),
and the ‘guiding thread’ of their joint work
(see alsomarxism). Historical materialism is
a theory of history incorporating a series of
bold theses about the dynamics of historical
change, most succinctly summarized in the
1859 ‘Preface’ to ‘A Contribution to the
Critique of Political Economy’.
Social development is driven by progress in
meeting social needs through the development
ofproductive forces(means of production and
labour power). In the process of production,
men and women necessarily enter into certain
social relations of production. These include both
work relations (technical relations and forms
of co-operation) and forms of ownership and
control of the means of production, which are
at the root ofclass formation. The totality of the
relations of production constitutes theeco-
nomic structureof society, ‘‘the real foundation,
on which arises a legal and politicalsuperstruc-
tureand to which correspond definite forms of
social consciousness’. The economic base and
superstructure together constitute themode of
productionof a society. (See alsobase and
superstructure.)
Eachmode of production is subject to
internal tensions and contradictions (see
dialectic). Thus, at a certain stage of their
development, the material productive forces of
society come into conflict with the dominant
relations of production, which reflect en-
trenched forms ofpropertyownership and
classrelations. The relations of production
increasingly become fetters on the further de-
velopment of the productive forces. ‘Then be-
gins an era of social revolution’, transforming
the economic structure, and with it the whole

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HISTORICAL MATERIALISM
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