The Spaces of Postmodernity
Readings in Human Geography

1. Auflage Dezember 2001
504 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
This Reader recounts the story of the emergence and impact
of postmodern thought in human geography. The editors have brought
together in a single volume the pivotal writings of the period
since 1965. Through these, and their connecting narratives, the
editors engage what has been the most invigorating intellectual
roller-coaster ride in geography's recent history.
* * Recounts the story of the emergence and impact of postmodern
thought in human geography.
* Brings together in a single volume the pivotal writings of the
period since 1965.
* Engages with what has been the most invigorating intellectual
roller-coaster ride in geography's recent history.
* Eraces the shift in human geography from a plethora of
pre-postmodern paradigms to the emergence of a postmodern
consciousness.
* Outlines an agenda for a postmodern human geographical theory
and practice that sympathetically intersects with feminism,
postcolonialism, cultural studies, and environmentalism.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction.
How to Map a Radical Break.
Part I: Fit the First: Excavating the Postmodern.
Part II: Fit the Second: Geographies from the Inside Out.
Index.
the Southern California Studies Center at the University of
Southern California. He was recently a Fellow at the Center for
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, and held a
Guggenheim Fellowship in 1989. He received Honors from the
Association of American Geographers in 1995. He is the
author/editor of a dozen books including most recently The
Postmodern Urban Condition (Blackwell, 2000), and From
Chicago to LA: Making Sense of Urban Theory (Sage,
2001).
Steven Flusty is a doctoral candidate in the Department
of Geography at the University of Southern California. He is the
author of numerous articles for academic journals, professional
publications and the popular press, as well as a monograph on
spaces of surveillant control entitled "Building Paranoia: The
Proliferation of Interdictory Space and the Erosion of Spatial
Justice." In addition to his current, on-going research into the
everyday practices of global formation, he has worked in industrial
design, architecture, and urban design for both the public and
private sectors.