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The SAGE Handbook of Human­ Geography, 2v
By Anssi Paasi (Edited by), Noel Castree (Edited by), Roger Lee (Edited by), Sarah Radcliffe (Edited by)

Rating
Format
Hardback, 840 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 22 May 2014

"Superb! How refreshing to see a Handbook that eschews convention and explores the richness and diversity of the geographical imagination in such stimulating and challenging ways." - Peter Dicken, University of Manchester "Stands out as an innovative and exciting contribution that exceeds the genre." - Sallie A. Marston, University of Arizona "Captures wonderfully the richness and complexity of the worlds that human beings inhabit... This is a stand-out among handbooks!" - Lily Kong, National University of Singapore "This wonderfully unconventional book demonstrates human geography's character and significance not by marching through traditional themes, but by presenting a set of geographical essays on basic ideas, practices, and concerns." - Alexander B. Murphy, University of Oregon




"This SAGE Handbook stands out for its capacity to provoke the reader to think anew about human geography ... essays that offer some profoundly original insights into what it means to engage geographically with the world."
- Eric Sheppard, UCLA
Published in association with the journal
Progress in Human Geography
, edited and written by the principal scholars in the discipline, this Handbook demonstrates the difference that thinking about the world geographically makes. Each section considers how human geography shapes the world, interrogates it, and intervenes in it. It includes a major retrospective and prospective introductory essay, with three substantive sections on:
  • Imagining Human Geographies
  • Practising Human Geographies
  • Living Human Geographies

The Handbook also has an innovative multimedia component of conversations about key issues in human geography - as well as an overview of human geography from the Editors. A key reference for any scholar interested in questions about what difference it makes to think spatially or geographically about the world, this Handbook is a rich and textured statement about the geographical imagination.

VOLUME ONE

Part I: Imagining Human Geographies

Place - Tim Cresswell

Mobilities - Johanna Waters

Spatialities - Jacques Lévy

Difference - Katharyne Mitchell

More-than-Human Geographies - Beth Greenough

Society-Nature - Andrea Nightingale

Transformations - Dan Clayton

Critique - Alastair Bonnett

Geo-historiographies - Trevor Barnes

Part II: Practising Human Geographies

Capturing (GIS) - Matt Wilson and Sarah Elwood

Noticing - Eric Laurier

Representing - Anna Barford

Writing (somewhere) - Juliet Fall

Researching - Meghan Cope

Producing - Mia Gray

Engaging - Jane Wills

Educating - Avril Maddrell and Jenny Hill

Advocacy - Audrey Kobayashi

VOLUME TWO

Part III: Living Human Geographies

Ethics - Elizabeth Olson

Economy - Marianna Pavlovskaya and Kevin St Martin

Society - Jamie Winders

Culture - Patricia Price

Politics - David Featherstone

Words - Christopher Philo and Cheryl McGeachan

Power - Louise Amoore

Development - Kate Wills

Bodies - Rachel Silvey and Jean-Francois Bissonnette

Identities - Robyn Dowling and Katherine McKinnon

Demographies - Elspeth Graham

Health - Matt Sparke

Resistance - Sarah Wright

Part IV: Appendix- Transcriptions

Online Video Conversations

Why Human Geography?: an editorial conversation - Roger Lee, Noel Castree, Sarah Elwood, Rob Kitchin and Susan Roberts

Geography and geographical thought - David Livingstone and Doreen Massey

Nature and Society - Susan Owens and Sarah Whatmore

Geography and geographical practice - Katherine Gibson and Susan J Smith

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Product Description

"Superb! How refreshing to see a Handbook that eschews convention and explores the richness and diversity of the geographical imagination in such stimulating and challenging ways." - Peter Dicken, University of Manchester "Stands out as an innovative and exciting contribution that exceeds the genre." - Sallie A. Marston, University of Arizona "Captures wonderfully the richness and complexity of the worlds that human beings inhabit... This is a stand-out among handbooks!" - Lily Kong, National University of Singapore "This wonderfully unconventional book demonstrates human geography's character and significance not by marching through traditional themes, but by presenting a set of geographical essays on basic ideas, practices, and concerns." - Alexander B. Murphy, University of Oregon




"This SAGE Handbook stands out for its capacity to provoke the reader to think anew about human geography ... essays that offer some profoundly original insights into what it means to engage geographically with the world."
- Eric Sheppard, UCLA
Published in association with the journal
Progress in Human Geography
, edited and written by the principal scholars in the discipline, this Handbook demonstrates the difference that thinking about the world geographically makes. Each section considers how human geography shapes the world, interrogates it, and intervenes in it. It includes a major retrospective and prospective introductory essay, with three substantive sections on:

The Handbook also has an innovative multimedia component of conversations about key issues in human geography - as well as an overview of human geography from the Editors. A key reference for any scholar interested in questions about what difference it makes to think spatially or geographically about the world, this Handbook is a rich and textured statement about the geographical imagination.

VOLUME ONE

Part I: Imagining Human Geographies

Place - Tim Cresswell

Mobilities - Johanna Waters

Spatialities - Jacques Lévy

Difference - Katharyne Mitchell

More-than-Human Geographies - Beth Greenough

Society-Nature - Andrea Nightingale

Transformations - Dan Clayton

Critique - Alastair Bonnett

Geo-historiographies - Trevor Barnes

Part II: Practising Human Geographies

Capturing (GIS) - Matt Wilson and Sarah Elwood

Noticing - Eric Laurier

Representing - Anna Barford

Writing (somewhere) - Juliet Fall

Researching - Meghan Cope

Producing - Mia Gray

Engaging - Jane Wills

Educating - Avril Maddrell and Jenny Hill

Advocacy - Audrey Kobayashi

VOLUME TWO

Part III: Living Human Geographies

Ethics - Elizabeth Olson

Economy - Marianna Pavlovskaya and Kevin St Martin

Society - Jamie Winders

Culture - Patricia Price

Politics - David Featherstone

Words - Christopher Philo and Cheryl McGeachan

Power - Louise Amoore

Development - Kate Wills

Bodies - Rachel Silvey and Jean-Francois Bissonnette

Identities - Robyn Dowling and Katherine McKinnon

Demographies - Elspeth Graham

Health - Matt Sparke

Resistance - Sarah Wright

Part IV: Appendix- Transcriptions

Online Video Conversations

Why Human Geography?: an editorial conversation - Roger Lee, Noel Castree, Sarah Elwood, Rob Kitchin and Susan Roberts

Geography and geographical thought - David Livingstone and Doreen Massey

Nature and Society - Susan Owens and Sarah Whatmore

Geography and geographical practice - Katherine Gibson and Susan J Smith

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9780857022486
ISBN
0857022482
Other Information
illustrations (black and white), maps (black and white)
Dimensions
25.2 x 18.1 x 5.7 centimeters (1.80 kg)

Table of Contents

VOLUME ONE
Part I: Imagining Human Geographies
Place - Tim Cresswell
Mobilities - Johanna Waters
Spatialities - Jacques Lévy
Difference - Katharyne Mitchell
More-than-Human Geographies - Beth Greenough
Society-Nature - Andrea Nightingale
Transformations - Dan Clayton
Critique - Alastair Bonnett
Geo-historiographies - Trevor Barnes
Part II: Practising Human Geographies
Capturing (GIS) - Matt Wilson and Sarah Elwood
Noticing - Eric Laurier
Representing - Anna Barford
Writing (somewhere) - Juliet Fall
Researching - Meghan Cope
Producing - Mia Gray
Engaging - Jane Wills
Educating - Avril Maddrell and Jenny Hill
Advocacy - Audrey Kobayashi
VOLUME TWO
Part III: Living Human Geographies
Ethics - Elizabeth Olson
Economy - Marianna Pavlovskaya and Kevin St Martin
Society - Jamie Winders
Culture - Patricia Price
Politics - David Featherstone
Words - Christopher Philo and Cheryl McGeachan
Power - Louise Amoore
Development - Kate Wills
Bodies - Rachel Silvey and Jean-Francois Bissonnette
Identities - Robyn Dowling and Katherine McKinnon
Demographies - Elspeth Graham
Health - Matt Sparke
Resistance - Sarah Wright
Part IV: Appendix- Transcriptions
Online Video Conversations
Why Human Geography?: an editorial conversation - Roger Lee, Noel Castree, Sarah Elwood, Rob Kitchin and Susan Roberts
Geography and geographical thought - David Livingstone and Doreen Massey
Nature and Society - Susan Owens and Sarah Whatmore
Geography and geographical practice - Katherine Gibson and Susan J Smith

About the Author

Roger Lee is Emeritus Professor of Geography at Queen Mary, University of London. He is an economic geographer interested in the connections and contradictions between the presumed hard logics of economy and their socio-cultural practice and in the possibilities for progressive change that might ensue from the latter.

Noel Castree is a Professor of Society & Environment at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). He has applied Marxist political economy to understand global environmental change and policy. His recent research explores how different forms of expertise jostle to gain traction in public understandings of the Earth and its future trajectories. He is the managing editor of the peer review journal Progress in Human Geography, co-editor of the book David Harvey: A Critical Reader (2007) and author of Making Sense of Nature (2014). His recent articles have appeared in Anthropocene Review, Environmental Humanities and Ambio, among others.


Rob Kitchin is a Professor in Maynooth University Social Sciences Institute and Department of Geography. He was a European Research Council Advanced Investigator on the Programmable City project (2013-2018) and a principal investigator on the Building City Dashboards project (2016-2020) and for the Digital Repository of Ireland (2009-2017). He is the (co)author or (co)editor of 31 other academic books, and (co)author of over 200 articles and book chapters. He has been an editor of Dialogues in Human Geography, Progress in Human Geography and Social and Cultural Geography, and was the co-Editor-in-Chief of the International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. He was the 2013 recipient of the Royal Irish Academy’s Gold Medal for the Social Sciences. Victoria Lawson is Professor of Geography and former chair at the University of Washington Geography Department.  Her work engages with feminist care ethics, relational poverty studies and comparative qualitative methodologies.  She served as North American Editor for PiHG (2008-2012) and is editorial board member of Economic Geography. Anssi Paasi is Professor of Geography at the University of Oulu, Finland. He has published widely on the socio-cultural construction of political borders, spatial identities, new regional geography, and on region/territory building processes. His books include Territories, Boundaries and Consciousness (Wiley 1996) Chris Philo is a professor of geography at the University of Glasgow. His specialist interest is the historical geography of “spaces reserved for insanity,” meaning people with mental health problems, across many centuries in Britain. He is fascinated by the history and theory of geography, as both academic subject and wider way of engaging with the world. He has undertaken critical-scholarly research on the geographies of “outsider” human groupings, including children and people with learning disabilities, as well as on the geographies of human-animal relations, rural geographies, and a range of health geographies. He has long been concerned with what psychoanalytic and psychological approaches can bring to geographical studies. Sarah A Radcliffe is Professor of Latin American Geography, at the University of Cambridge. She has interests in development geography, gender and geography, and postcolonial approaches. She has published widely on these themes in English and Spanish, including Indigenous Development in the Andes: Culture, Power and Transnationalism (2009, Duke University Press, co-author). Professor Radcliffe′s latest book is Dilemmas of Difference: Indigenous women and the limits of postcolonial development policy (2015, Duke University Press). 

Susan M. Roberts is Professor of Geography and member of the Committee on Social Theory at the University of Kentucky. Her interests include political and economic geography, and the political economy of inequality and development. Professor Charles W J Withers is Ogilvie Chair of Geography and Professor of Historical Geography at the University of Edinburgh. He has been a professor in Edinburgh since 1994. He is a fellow of the British Academy, of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Royal Scottish Geographical Society, and the Royal Historical Society. In 2008, he was awarded the Centenary Medal of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society in recognition of his ‘outstanding and sustained contribution to historical geography, the history of cartography and to the history of geographical knowledge’. In 2012, he was awarded the Founders’ Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society. This, one of the Society′s two Royal Gold Medals, was given in respect of his ‘world-leading encouragement and development of historical and cultural geography’.

        Professor Withers′ research and teaching interests centre on the historical geography of science and the Enlightenment, the historical geographies of print and exploration, and the history of cartography. He is the author or co-author of ten research monographs, and a further nine co-edited volumes, in addition to numerous scholarly articles and essays. His co-authored Scotland: Mapping the Nation (written with Chris Fleet and Margaret Wilkes), which was published in 2011 by Birlinn Press in association with the National Library of Scotland, was the Scottish Research Book of the Year in the Saltire Society Literary Awards for 2012.

        His most recent book, co-authored with Innes Keighren and Bill Bell, is Travels into Print: Exploration, Writing, and Publishing with John Murray, 1773-1859′. This was published by the University of Chicago Press in May 2015. In 2015, he was appointed by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and First Minister Nicola Sturgeon to the position of Geographer Royal for Scotland, the first person to hold this title as a personal honorific for 118 years. He is currently writing a historical geography of the Prime Meridian, a narrative for which we know the solution (‘Greenwich, from 1884’) but not the problem.

Reviews

This wonderfully unconventional book demonstrates human geography’s character and significance not by marching through traditional themes, but by presenting a set of geographical essays on basic ideas, practices, and concerns. The result is a set of reflections that highlights the richness and insight of contemporary human geographical thinking. The book challenges readers to think in new ways and to recognize the sophistication, reach, and possibility of human geographic inquiry.
*Alexander B. Murphy*

Superb! How refreshing to see a Handbook that eschews convention and explores the richness and diversity of the geographical imagination in such stimulating and challenging ways. Full of surprises and unexpected diversions. It truly epitomises ′progress′ in human geography.
*Peter Dicken*

While geography as a discipline has recently experienced a proliferation of handbooks, compendia, dictionaries and encyclopedias, the Handbook of Human Geography stands out as an innovative and exciting contribution that exceeds the genre. Collected here are not the usual broad overviews, but a more penetrating set of pieces that treat not so much the "what" of human geography but the "how"; that is, it asks the reader to deliberate on the key practices in which human geographers are engaged and their central relevance not only to comprehend but also to intervene in and transform worlds.
*Sallie A. Marston*

This will be an incredibly useful resource for all those interested in what it means to imagine, think and act geographically. The Handbook captures wonderfully the richness and complexity of the worlds that human beings inhabit, highlighting the significance of geography in contributing to an understanding of these worlds and in shaping everyday practice. At the same time, the editors and authors emphasise and explore the relations between human geography and other disciplines and invite debates on these boundaries. All readers, whatever their disciplinary backgrounds, will find much to stimulate their thinking, and will appreciate the breadth of insight. This is a stand-out among handbooks!
*Lily Kong, Professor of Geography*

"Notwithstanding the flood of handbooks and companions that has beset the discipline, this SAGE Handbook stands out for its capacity to provoke the reader to think anew about human geography. Its focus--on keywords, rather than the usual sub-disciplinary categories; on thinking and acting geographically, rather than on bounding a discipline; on engaging across the breadth of human geography, within not just between contributions; and on praxis, in ways that exceed the conventional academic predilections—has generated essays that offer some profoundly original insights into what it means to engage geographically with the world."
*Eric Sheppard*

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