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but that he pushed this displacement to its
limits to create what they call ‘lines of escape’.
Minorliteratureis about the conscious use
of displacement to call into question and
change dominant modes of writing and using
language. By extension, minor theory is intent
on making alternativesubjectivities,spatial-
itiesand temporalities. It seeks to rework
major theory from within, destabilizing
received modes of knowing and the power/
knowledge that produces and frames their
objects. What is constituted as major or minor
is historically and geographically specific.
Deleuze and Guattari make clear that the
major and minor are not different languages
but, rather, different ways of working with the
same language. This work – or play – can
enliven and renovate language (and theory)
so that it is made to express something new
because the limits of its traditional forms are
breached.
The idea of ‘becoming’ is crucial to Deleuze
and Guattari’s notion of the minor. ‘Becom-
ing’ suggests change and mutability, but also
movement that ruptures, decomposes and
recomposes. ‘Becoming’ invokes temporality,
but its space is one of betweenness. Both work
against the sort of dualism that would pit
major against minor, or vice versa, but if the
notion of becoming is to produce a critical
politics, it must be understood as positioned
somewhere (Braidotti, 1994; Katz, 1996). As
a mode of thinking relationally, minor theory
offers a means to reframe and move through
theoretical impasses between, say,marxism
andfeminismor local and global (cf. Massey,
Allen and Sarre, 1999; Anderson 2000b). It
can be a powerful strategy for recognizing and
re-imagining difference; of thinkingrace
throughclassthroughgender, for instance,
and through the iterative displacements such
work calls forth, creating new spaces of and for
political practice and engagement. ck
Suggested reading
Anderson(2000b);Massey,AllenandSarre(1999).
mobility There are two main uses of the term
inhuman geography: (1) the movement of
people, ideas or goods acrossterritory(phys-
ical mobility); and (2) change in social status
(social mobility). Reflecting current interest,
the journalMobilitieswas instituted in 2006.
Human mobility occurs over varying tem-
poral and spatialscales, withmigrationre-
ferring to mobility that involves a change in
residential location, whether within a city or
across continents and daily mobility, including
commuting, referring to movements that do
not entail a change of residence. Involving any
one of a variety of means (e.g. feet, automo-
bile, train, bicycle, airplane, wheelchair), mo-
bility incurs costs in both time and money. As
the costs of mobility have fallen (for example,
the cost of sending a letter; the cost of travel
between London and Mumbai), the separation
between places has shrunk, a process known as
time–space convergence, which has contrib-
uted greatly toglobalization. In addition to
incurring costs, mobility – the ability to move
between and among places, whether on a daily
basis or over thelife course–alsoconfers
benefits; indeed, humans could not exist with-
out some form of mobility, and at every geo-
graphical scale we have been consuming ever
more of it. Because mobility is important for
accessibility,itisoftenconsideredanimport-
ant component of independence and quality of
life (Hanson and Pratt, 1995), such that popu-
lations who lack the temporal or financial re-
sources required for mobility (e.g. the elderly,
childrenor working parents with young chil-
dren) become the focus of concern and mobil-
ity-enhancing programmes.
With the advent of telecommunications,
physical mobility is no longer required for
spatial interaction, and geographers have
devoted considerable attention to understand-
ing the complex relationship between physical
mobility and virtual mobility (e.g. shopping
for books on theinternetafter browsing in a
local bookstore). Whereas physical mobility
does not requirenetworks(one need not
cross a meadow on a path), it is certainly
enhanced by them, as movement is easier on
a network than off of one. Virtual mobility
does rely on network structures. For both
physical and virtual mobility, networks are
crucially important in channelling and shap-
ing mobility patterns.
Social mobility, which refers to upward or
downward changes in the socio-economic sta-
tus of individuals orhouseholds, has drawn
considerable attention inurbanandsocial
geography. Of particular interest has been
the relationship between social mobility and
spatial mobility; in theories associated with
thechicago schoolof urban sociology: for
example, the upward social mobility that
accompanied the assimilation of immigrants
into American society took place via residential
movement ever outwards from the urban core.
Like other forms of mobility, social mobility
also involves networks; the size, social compos-
ition and spatial location of a person’s network
of social contacts can affect the probability of
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MOBILITY