Feminism & Geography: The Limits of Geographical Knowledge

Couverture
U of Minnesota Press, 1993 - 205 pages
Geography is a subject that throughout its history has been dominated by men; men have undertaken the heroic explorations that form the mythology of its foundation, men have written most of its texts, and, as many feminist geographers have remarked, men's interests have structured what counts as legitimate geographical knowledge. This book offers a sustained examination of the masculinism of contemporary geographical discourses. Drawing on the work of feminist theories about the intersection of power, knowledge and subjectivity, Rose discusses different aspects of the discipline's masculinism in a series of essays that bring influential approaches in recent geography together with feminist accounts of the space of the everyday, the notion of a sense of place, and views of landscape. In the final chapter, she examines the spatial imagery of a variety of feminists in order to argue that the geographical imagination implicit in feminist discussions of the politics of location is one example of a geography that does not deny difference in the name of a universal masculinity.
 

Table des matières

an Introduction
1
2 Women and Everyday Spaces
17
3 No Place for Women?
41
Knowledge and Critique
62
the Uneasy Pleasures of Power
86
Production Reproduction and Beyond
113
7 A Politics of Paradoxical Space
137
Notes
161
Index
203
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Gillian Rose was a British philosopher and sociologist. She is the author of Paradiso and Mourning Becomes the Law.




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