Re-imagining the futures of geographical thought and praxis

IF 8.2 1区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
R. Rose-Redwood, CindyAnn Rose-Redwood, Elia Apostolopoulou, Tyler Blackman, Han Cheng, Anindita Datta, Sharon Dias, Federico Ferretti, Wil Patrick, James Riding, Mitch Rose, Anu Sabhlok
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The question of geography's future has recurred throughout the history of geographical thought, and responses to it often presume a linear trajectory from the past and present to a possible future. Yet one of the major contributions that geographers have made to understanding spatio-temporality is reconceiving both space and time as plural, fluid, and co-constituted through multiple space–time trajectories simultaneously. Amidst the ongoing crises of the present, this article opens the current special issue with a call to pluralize geography's futures by diversifying the voices speaking in the name of ‘geography’ and broadening the horizon of possibilities for the futures of geographical thought and praxis. We have assembled the contributions in this collection with the aim of raising important theoretical, methodological, and empirical questions about how geography's past and present shape the conditions of possibility for its potential futures. In doing so, we seek to demonstrate how the worlding of geography's futures is fundamentally a matter of transforming its disciplinary reproduction in the here-and-now.
重新构想地理思想和实践的未来
地理学的未来问题在地理学思想史上反复出现,对这一问题的回应往往预设了从过去和现在到可能的未来的线性轨迹。然而,地理学家在理解时空性方面做出的主要贡献之一,就是重新认识了空间和时间的多元性、流动性,以及通过多种时空轨迹同时共同构成的时空性。在当前持续不断的危机中,本文作为本期特刊的开篇,呼吁以 "地理学 "的名义发出多样化的声音,拓宽地理学思想和实践未来的可能性视野,从而实现地理学未来的多元化。我们汇集了这本文集中的所有文章,旨在就地理学的过去和现在如何塑造其潜在未来的可能性条件提出重要的理论、方法论和实证问题。在此过程中,我们试图证明地理学未来的世界化如何从根本上改变其在此时此地的学科再现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
4.00%
发文量
86
期刊介绍: Dialogues in Human Geography aims to foster open and critical debate on the philosophical, methodological, and pedagogical underpinnings of geographic thought and practice. The journal publishes articles, accompanied by responses, that critique current thinking and practice while charting future directions for geographic thought, empirical research, and pedagogy. Dialogues is theoretically oriented, forward-looking, and seeks to publish original and innovative work that expands the boundaries of geographical theory, practice, and pedagogy through a unique format of open peer commentary. This format encourages engaged dialogue. The journal's scope encompasses the broader agenda of human geography within the context of social sciences, humanities, and environmental sciences, as well as specific ideas, debates, and practices within disciplinary subfields. It is relevant and useful to those interested in all aspects of the discipline.
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