| Daphne Spain - 1992 - Liczba stron: 332
...status affects location. By 1989 Soja was more strident in his demand for the geographical dimension: "We must be insistently aware of how space can be...the apparently innocent spatiality of social life" (Soja 1989, 6). The proposed relationship between space and status is grounded in the "structuration"... | |
| Pauline Marie Rosenau - 1991 - Liczba stron: 250
...confine and enclose, as tools of discipline. "Space can be made to hide consequences from us ... And power and discipline are inscribed into the apparently innocent spatiality of social life" (Soja 1989: 6). Foucault argues that relational forms of space are important. He offers total institutions,... | |
| Susan P. Kemp, James K. Whittaker, Elizabeth M. Tracy - Liczba stron: 284
...reasonableness, and neutrality of physical and social environments. As geographer Edward Soja argues: We must be insistently aware of how space can be made...how relations of power and discipline are inscribed in the apparently innocent spatiality of social life, how human geographies become filled with politics... | |
| Susan P. Kemp, James K. Whittaker, Elizabeth M. Tracy - Liczba stron: 284
...space can be made to hide consequences from us, how relations of power and discipline are inscribed in the apparently innocent spatiality of social life,...geographies become filled with politics and ideology. (1989, 6) This more recent scholarship is helpful on many levels. In general, it moves our thinking... | |
| Anthony Woodiwiss - 1998 - Liczba stron: 332
...theory from which it was excluded in the course of the nineteenth century. As Soja (1989, p. 6) says: 'We must be insistently aware of how space can be...geographies become filled with politics and ideology.' It seems to me that such an awareness of the semiotic dimension of space, especially of its capacity... | |
| Benjamin J. Cohen - 1998 - Liczba stron: 252
...governance and not another. Our choices are by no means without consequence, as Edward Soja reminds us: "We 'must be insistently aware of how space can be...geographies become filled with politics and ideology" (1989:6). In effect, geography is politics. How we conceive of space has a real impact on how we think... | |
| Tim Woods - 1999 - Liczba stron: 308
...as disguising our 'real' relations, Soja argues that space ought to be subject to the same scrutiny: 'We must be insistently aware of how space can be...geographies become filled with politics and ideology' (Soja, Postmodern Geography (London, Verso, 1989), p. 6). Soja's postmodern geography builds upon Lefebvre's... | |
| Dorothee E. Kocks - 2000 - Liczba stron: 280
...the consequences of this habit of thought. Postmodern theorists tell the story in abstract language: "We must be insistently aware of how space can be made to hide consequences from us, . . . how human geographies become filled with politics and ideology."44 So urges Edward Soja, one of a band... | |
| Erika Suderburg - 2000 - Liczba stron: 392
...paradigm. In this way, Asco's erhics of combat can be seen as making us, in the words of Edward Soja, "insistently aware of how space can be made to hide consequences from us ... how human geographies become filled with politics and ideology" (Soja 1989: 6). Given theit spatial and... | |
| Barbara Kamler - 2001 - Liczba stron: 232
...happen' (Keith and Pile 1993:2). For Soja, the spaces where we live, work and write are never neutral. We must be insistently aware of how space can be made...geographies become filled with politics and ideology. (Soja 1989:6) A discussion of writing pedagogies—the way these 'become filled with politics and ideology'—can... | |
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