Spatial FormationsSAGE Publications, 13 juin 1996 - 384 pages This essential guide to social theory and space is written by one of the leading writers in the field. Nigel Thrift explores the interconnections among people, places and things and demonstrates why they must be examined in relation to each other rather than in isolation - as is too often the case. Spatial Formations presents a formidable analysis of how space is socially constructed, unmade and reconstructed. Thrift provides the reader with a direct understanding of how social theory can be used to make sense of spatial forms and practices, and how spatial relations are made durable over space and time. These themes are developed through case studies, ranging from medieval time consciousness to the modern usage of m |
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Page 35
... notion of shaping employed here is one that implies a quite different notion of relation to the world from the ordinary casual link that it sometimes gets confused with . Shotter's and Taylor's ( 1993b ) use of Heideggerian ...
... notion of shaping employed here is one that implies a quite different notion of relation to the world from the ordinary casual link that it sometimes gets confused with . Shotter's and Taylor's ( 1993b ) use of Heideggerian ...
Page 57
... notion of society ( although he still half - heartedly uses it ) and has insisted on a notion of interconnecting social systems that , as in actor- network theories , are constantly realised spatial and temporal orders . This vision is ...
... notion of society ( although he still half - heartedly uses it ) and has insisted on a notion of interconnecting social systems that , as in actor- network theories , are constantly realised spatial and temporal orders . This vision is ...
Page 164
... notion of modernity are fourfold . The first is theoretical . I have been concerned to show that much of what we regard as modernity is generated by intellectual forms of life which , because of their allegiance to a textualist model of ...
... notion of modernity are fourfold . The first is theoretical . I have been concerned to show that much of what we regard as modernity is generated by intellectual forms of life which , because of their allegiance to a textualist model of ...
Table des matières
Earlier | 51 |
On the Determination of Social Action in Space and Time | 63 |
A Geography of Knowledge | 96 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
1945 General Election accounts actant activity actor-network actor-network theory actors Anthony Giddens become bells body Bourdieu Cambridge canonical hours centres Certeau chapter City communication concepts consciousness constituted context credit money cultural Deleuze discourse E.P. Thompson economic electricity electronic empirical knowledge Encyclopédie England everyday example existence forms Giddens Giddens's global Haraway Heidegger human agent human geography ideology important increasingly individual institutions interaction international financial system kind labour live London machinic complex Marxist Mass-Observation means mobility modern N.J. Thrift networks nineteenth century notion ontology organisation Oxford particular political possible postmodern poststructuralism poststructuralist problem produced R.J. Johnston region relations Routledge Royal Observer Corps Second sense Shotter social action social groups social structure social theory society Sociology space spatial structurationist structure of feeling texts theoretical thirteenth century time-space University Press urban Urry Wittgenstein words writing