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Direction and Socio-spatial Theory

A Political Economy of Oriented Practice

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-0-367-58317-0
Verlag: Routledge
Erscheinungstermin: 30.06.2020
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage

The embodied directedness of human practice has long been neglected in critical socio-spatial theory, in favor of analyses focused upon distance and proximity. This book illustrates the absence of a sense for direction in much theoretical discourse and lays important groundwork for redressing this lacuna in socio-spatial theory.

Many accounts of the social world are incomplete, or are increasingly out of step with recent developments of neoliberal capitalism. Not least through new technological mediations of production and consumption, the much-discussed waning of the importance of physical distance has been matched by the increasing centrality of turning from one thing to another as a basic way in which lives are structured and occupied. A sensibility for embodied processes of turning, and for phenomena of direction more generally, is urgently needed. Chapters develop wide-ranging and original engagements with the arguments of Sara Ahmed, Jonathan Beller, Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Virginia Held, Bernard Stiegler, Theodore Schatzki, Rahel Jaeggi, Hartmut Rosa and David Harvey.

This book reinterprets practice, embodiment, alienation, reification, social reproduction and ethical responsibility from a directional perspective. It will be a new valuable resource and reference for political and social geography students, as well as sociologists and anthropologists.


Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9780367583170
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-0-367-58317-0
  • Verlag: Routledge
  • Erscheinungstermin: 30.06.2020
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: 1. Auflage 2020
  • Serie: Routledge Research in Place, Space and Politics
  • Produktform: Kartoniert
  • Gewicht: 363 g
  • Seiten: 232
  • Format (B x H x T): 156 x 234 x 13 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt
Autoren/Hrsg.

Autoren

Introduction

Part I: Foundations

1. Political economies of attention

2. Toward a political phenomenology of attention

3. The directedness of practice

Part II: Turning-in-the-world

4. Turning subject

5. Turning-as-relation: direction, alienation and montage

6. Turning and reification

Part III: Direction, socio-spatial theory and ethics

7. Occupation and directed practice: outline of a political economy

8. Visualizing directed social practice

Conclusion: ethics and directional responsibility