Preface. Acknowledgements. Introduction: How to Map a Radical Break. Part I: Fit the First: Excavating the Postmodern:. 1. 1965-83: Pre-Postmodern Geographies:. Locational Analysis in Human Geography: Peter Haggett. Explanation in Geography: David Harvey. Behavioral Models in Geography: KevinR. Cox and Reginald G. Golledge. The Development of Radical Geography in the United States: Richard Peet. Social Justice and the City: David Harvey. Social Geography and Social Action: David Ley. Alternatives to a Positive Economic Geography: Leslie J. King. Eggs in Bird: Gunnar Olsson. Ideology, Science and Human Geography: Derek Gregory. On the Determination of Social Action in Space and Time: Nigel J. Thrift. Towards an Understanding of the Gender Division of Urban Space: Linda McDowell. 2. 1984-89: Postmodern Geographies:. "Repent, Harlequin!" Said the Ticktockman: Harlan Ellison. The Production of Space: Henri Lefebvre. Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism: Fredric Jameson. Taking Los Angeles Apart: Some Fragements of a Critical Human Geography: Edward W. Soja. Postmodernism and Planning: Michael J. Dear. The Condition of Postmodernity: David Harvey. 3. 1990-2000: The Altered Spaces of Postmodernity:. Snow Crash: Neal Stephenson. Anti-Essentialism and Overdetermination: Julie Graham. (Post) Colonial Spaces: Jane M. Jacobs. Zoöpolis: Jennifer Wolch. The Geographical Foundations and Social Regulation of Flexible Production Complexes: Michael Storper and Allen J. Scott. Postmoern Urbanism: Michael J. Dear and Steven Flusty. Toward an Economy of Electronic Representation and the Virtual Sign: John Pickles. Critical Geopolitics: The Politics of Writing Global Space: Gearóid O' Tuathail. Part II: Fit the Second: Geographies from the Inside Out:. 4. The Representation of Space:. The Storyteller with Nike Airs: Kieya Forte-Escamilla. Sounding out of the City: Music and the Sensuous Production of Space: Sarah Cohen. Deconstructing the Map: J. B. Harley. From Berlin to Bunker Hill: Urban Space, Late Modernity, and Film Noir in Fritz Lang's M: Edward Dimendberg. 5. Emplaced Bodies, Embodied Selves:. East, West Stories: Salman Rushdie. Feminism and Geography: The Limits of Geographical Knowledge: Gillian Rose. From Landmarks to Spaces: Mapping the Territory of a Bisexual Genealogy: Clare Hemmings. Thrashing Downtown: Play as Resistance to the Spatial and Representational Regulation of Los Angeles: Steven Flusty. Elvis in Zanzibar: Ahmed Gurnah. 6. From the Politics of Urban Place to a Politics of Global Displacement:. Unlikely Stories, Mostly: Alasdair Gray. Can there be a Postmodernism of Resistance in the Urban Landscape?: David Ley and Caroline Mills. The Spaces that Difference Makes: Some Notes on the Geographical Margins of the New Cultural Politics: Edward W. Soja and Barbara Hooper. Materialities, Spatialities, Globalities: John Law and Kevin Hetherington. Exterminating Angels: Morality, Violence and Technology in the Gulf War: Asu Aksoy and Kevin Robins. Old Antonio Tells Marcos Another Story: Subcommandante Insurgente Marcos. 7. The Spaces of Representations:. Pioneers of the Human Adventure: François Boucq. A Ramble through the Margins of the Cityscape: The Postmodern as the Return of Nature: Kevin Donnelly. La Practique Sauvage: Race, Place, and the Human-Animal Divide: Glen Elder, Jennifer Wolch, and Jody Emel. Window Shopping: Cinema and the Postmodern: Anne Friedberg. Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet: Sherry Turkle. Inconclusion: A Conversation: Michael. J. Dear, Steven Flusty, and Django Sibley. Index.
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