1 / 25

Dr. Susan P. Mains Geography

GE21001 Dynamic Human Worlds Lecture 2 How do human geographers investigate space, power and inequality?. Dr. Susan P. Mains Geography. Lecture Outline. Defining Space Society-Space & Inequality Approaches to space, power and inequality—some examples Useful Reading:

imani-roman
Télécharger la présentation

Dr. Susan P. Mains Geography

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GE21001 Dynamic Human WorldsLecture 2How do human geographers investigate space, power and inequality? Dr. Susan P. Mains Geography

  2. Lecture Outline Defining Space Society-Space & Inequality Approaches to space, power and inequality—some examples Useful Reading: Susan J. Smith. 2009. “Society-Space,” Chapter 2 of Introducing Human Geographies, 2nd Edition by Cloke et al., p18-33.

  3. Defining Space • Space and society • Previously: “regard spatial arrangements as a more or less straightforward reflection of social divisions” (Smith 2009, 18) • More complex, multiple relations & processes • Diversity of approaches in human geography

  4. Defining Space • Space and society • Moving from more “fixed” ideas about space and differences between places • descriptionpatternsrelative space • Towards understanding power and space • Why places were where they were? • How different individuals/institutions used and related to spaces in varying ways

  5. Defining Space • “Space and time (or space-time) are now seen as being ‘produced’ or ‘constituted’ through action and interaction” (Derek Gregory, 2000, p. 771, The Dictionary of Human Geography, Blackwell).

  6. Defining Space 2) “Space and time cannot be held fast in fixed compartments, measured intervals or regular geometries” (Derek Gregory, 2000, p. 772, The Dictionary of Human Geography, Blackwell).

  7. Defining Space 3) “productions of space are inseparable from productions of NATURE” (Derek Gregory, 2000, p. 772, The Dictionary of Human Geography, Blackwell).

  8. Defining Space • Space and social practices are intertwined • They are dynamic • Material and social • Rhythm and feel of the same space may vary • Physically spaces may be in close proximity, but economically worlds apart

  9. Princes Street Gardens & Castle, Edinburgh

  10. Trafalgar Square, London

  11. Jakarta, Indonesia

  12. Space and Place • Place giving space meaning • Emotional attachments, experiences • Places are dynamic and relational • “Sense of place” • Stories, events, identities linked to places

  13. Places are “Happening”! • Place is an event in that sense too... There can be no assumption of pre-given coherence, or of community or collective identity. Rather the throwntogetherness of place demands negotiation. • Doreen Massey, For Space (2005)

  14. Space, Power and Inequality • Critical: challenging positivist “objective” researcher • Research is a product of society • Different forms of knowledge & data • Questioning abstraction & reduction

  15. Space, Power and Inequality • World is socially constructed • Shaped by experiences • Political perspectives • Access to information • Books, television news, government policies, social campaigns • Challenging taken-for-granted notions of space

  16. Space, Power and Inequality • Some examples of topics using a Marxian approach: • Don Mitchell--landscapes of migrant workers in California • David Harvey--cinema and changing economic relations • Doreen Massey--spatial divisions of labour in landscape

  17. Space, Power and Inequality

  18. Combining Marxist & Feminist Approaches: Socialist Feminism Urban planning: where are the different individuals or households? E.g., the difficulties for a working class single mother to access paid work, while locating childcare, accessing public transportation and maintaining a suitable income without having to travel lengthy distances daily.

  19. Homeless Women’s Meal Program, D.C.

  20. “Social networks in time and space: Homeless women on Skid Row” Annals of the AAG Vol.80, No.2 (1990) Jennifer Wolch

  21. Space, Power and Inequality • Poststructural approach: language, identity & power • Challenging the ways landscapes are constructed and “read’ • “taken-for-granted” aspects of landscapes • Michel Foucault & literary theory

  22. Space, Power and Inequality • Some examples of studies using a poststructural approach: • John Paul Jones, III-civil rights memorials and activists in Memphis, Tennessee • Carole Gallaher-strategies and narratives of patriotism in right wing US political movements • Vincent DelCasino-narratives of health and mobility in relation to AIDS/HIV in Thailand • Gillian Rose-feminist critiques of Geography • Marcus Doel-critiques of spatial science

  23. Space, Power and Inequality “Chapter 38: The Street Politics of Jackie Smith” by John Paul Jones, III in A Companion to the City (2008)

  24. Space, Power and Inequality Rosa Parks, 1955

More Related