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ways, TNCs are able to reduce their costs
and increase their profitability at the expense
of the jurisdictions in which they operate. rl
Suggested reading
Dicken (2007, ch. 8).
transferability One of Ullman’s (1956)
bases forspatial interactioncovering both
transport costs, which reflect the character-
istics of the transport system and thecom-
modity being moved, and commodity’s
ability to bear those costs. Precious metals
have high transferability, for example, because
they are easy to handle and transport costs are
small (per unit weight) relative to their total
value; plate glass has low transferability be-
cause it is difficult to handle and has relatively
low value. rj
transgression The act of crossing accepted
limits, of breaking rules or exceedingbound-
aries. Transgression challenges but also re-
veals and underlines the values considered to
be ‘normal’ and ‘appropriate’ in particular
geographical and social settings. It works
within and plays upon given spaces and con-
ditions, rather than operating from outside
them or seeking to constitute a new space or
system. Through the process and the reactions
to it, norms and codes about what is prohib-
ited and considered proper are highlighted.
For Bataille, whose writings have been par-
ticularly influential on understandings of the
concept, the ‘experience of transgression is
indissociable from the consciousness of the
constraint or prohibition it violates; indeed, it
is precisely by and through its transgression
that the force of a prohibition becomes
fully realized’ (see Suleiman, 1990, p. 75).
Transgression and the taboo therefore coexist
in a complex relationship, with the former not
denying the latter but transcending and com-
pleting it (see also Foucault, 1977b [1963];
Jenks, 2003).
geographyis important in the constitution
of limits and in demarcations of high and low,
normal and deviant, clean and polluted and
the like. Whilespaceis used as a means of
social control by the powerful, the resulting
socio-spatial orderings and codings may also
be potentially transgressed. Despite many
celebratory accounts of transgression, Stally-
brass and White (1986) insist that there is
nothing inherently politically progressive – or
conservative – about the process. In their in-
vestigation of the construction of European
bourgeois identity that ranges acrosssocial
formations, space and thebody, they exam-
ine the ways in which thatidentitywas de-
fined through the exclusion of what it deemed
‘low’, and how that expelled low ‘other’ be-
came a focus of desire as well as disgust. In
their view, transgression is often ‘a powerful
ritual or symbolic practice whereby the dom-
inant squanders its symbolic capital so as to
get in touch with the fields of desire which it
denied itself as the price paid for its political
power’ (1986, p. 210). The continual ‘redis-
covery’ of the carnivalesque within modern
culture and its importance as a semiotic
realm is related to its rejection in the constitu-
tion of bourgeois culture’s self-identity.
Analysing transgression is therefore a sig-
nificant means of understanding not only mar-
ginal acts, but also the processes by which the
normal, the central and the dominant become
defined. Transgression’s power comes in par-
ticular from its ability to expose the construct-
edness of socio-spatial orderings, and hence
their openness to criticism and to reconstruc-
tion. Transgression is distinct from resist-
ance, according to Cresswell (1996), in that
it does not rest on intentionality, but on its
effects and on the reactions it precipitates.
These cannot be defined in advance, but
have to be examined in particular geographical
and historical contexts. ‘Transgression’s effi-
cacy lies in the power of the established
boundaries and spaces that is so heretically
subverts,’ he states. ‘It is also limited by this
established geography; it is always in reaction
totopographiesof power’ (Cresswell, 1996,
p. 175). Yet, as he remarks, transgression can
contain ‘the seeds of new spatial orderings’. It
may, through becoming part of strategic strug-
gles, go beyond temporary tactical incursions
to contribute to social and spatial transform-
ation. dp
Suggested reading
Cresswell (1996); Stallybrass and White (1986).
transhumance Socially organized seasonal
movements of livestock along altitudinal and
bioclimatic gradients, usually in response to
changing availability of forage or water.
These movements differ from those associated
with nomadicpastoralism(seenomadism)in
that only a portion of the family (or other
social unit) associated with the herd makes
the journey, while the remainder of the family
remains at a more permanent dwelling. The
term was originally used in europe (the
French verbtranshumermeans to move live-
stock) to describe the movement of shepherds
Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 770 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju
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