Spatial Resistance

Spatial Resistance
Title Spatial Resistance PDF eBook
Author Christian Beck
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 216
Release 2019-01-11
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1498552420

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This book uses literary analysis and digital humanities to show how social justice can be enacted in everyday actions through changing the way we think about lived spaces. As corporate and state powers increase, it is necessary to examine ways to democratize space based on the shared values of equality, liberty, and solidarity.

Mobility, Spatiality, and Resistance in Literary and Political Discourse

Mobility, Spatiality, and Resistance in Literary and Political Discourse
Title Mobility, Spatiality, and Resistance in Literary and Political Discourse PDF eBook
Author Christian Beck
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 327
Release 2021-11-11
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3030834778

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Mobility, Space, and Resistance: Transformative Spatiality in Literary and Political Discourse draws from various disciplines—such as geography, sociology, political science, gender studies, and poststructuralist thought—to posit the productive capabilities of literature in political action and at the same time show how literary art can resist the imposition and domination of oppressive systems of our spatial lives. The various approaches, topics, and types of literature discussed in this volume display a concern for social issues that can be addressed in and through literature. The essays address social injustice, oppression, discrimination, and their spatial representations. While offering interpretations of literature, this collection seeks to show how literary spaces contribute to understanding, changing, or challenging physical spaces of our lived world.

Black Lives and Spatial Matters

Black Lives and Spatial Matters
Title Black Lives and Spatial Matters PDF eBook
Author Jodi Rios
Publisher Cornell University Press
Total Pages 365
Release 2020-08-15
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1501750488

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Black Lives and Spatial Matters is a call to reconsider the epistemic violence that is committed when scholars, policymakers, and the general public continue to frame Black precarity as just another racial, cultural, or ethnic conflict that can be solved solely through legal, political, or economic means. Jodi Rios argues that the historical and material production of blackness-as-risk is foundational to the historical and material construction of our society and certainly foundational to the construction and experience of metropolitan space. She also considers how an ethics of lived blackness—living fully and visibly in the face of forces intended to dehumanize and erase—can create a powerful counter point to blackness-as-risk. Using a transdisciplinary methodology, Black Lives and Spatial Matters studies cultural, institutional, and spatial politics of race in North St. Louis County, Missouri, as a set of practices that are intimately connected to each other and to global histories of race and race-making. As such, the book adds important insight into the racialization of metropolitan space and people in the United States. The arguments presented in this book draw from fifteen years of engaged research in North St. Louis County and rely on multiple disciplinary perspectives and local knowledge in order to study relationships between interconnected practices and phenomena.

Spatial Justice, Contested Governance and Livelihood Challenges in Bangladesh

Spatial Justice, Contested Governance and Livelihood Challenges in Bangladesh
Title Spatial Justice, Contested Governance and Livelihood Challenges in Bangladesh PDF eBook
Author Lutfun Nahar Lata
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 143
Release 2023-03-09
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1000848604

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This book analyses the key livelihood and governance challenges that the urban poor experience while navigating public spaces in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Using data collected through extensive fieldwork in Bangladesh, the book contributes to the emerging scholarship of resilient cities, gendered space, spatial justice, and poverty in cities of the Global South. The book assesses the everyday politics of survival for the urban poor; how the poor negotiate different levels of formal and informal modes of power and governance; and the dynamics of gender. It explores how tenuous counter-spaces are created when these factors combine to provide a valuable framework for work in other urban contexts in the Global South beyond Bangladesh. Using cross-disciplinary perspectives, this book investigates the issues of human development, urban governance, urban planning and the gendered nature of urban space to outline how these issues enable or constrain poor people’s livelihood practices and their rights to be in the city. Exploring debates surrounding placemaking and inclusive cities and their connection to poor people’s livelihoods, this book will be of interest to scholars in the field of Sociology, Development Studies, Planning, Geography and Anthropology.

Imperial Infrastructure and Spatial Resistance in Colonial Literature, 1880-1930

Imperial Infrastructure and Spatial Resistance in Colonial Literature, 1880-1930
Title Imperial Infrastructure and Spatial Resistance in Colonial Literature, 1880-1930 PDF eBook
Author Dominic Davies
Publisher Race and Resistance Across Borders in the Long Twentieth Century
Total Pages 0
Release 2017
Genre Capitalism
ISBN 9781906165888

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The colonial literature of the British Empire often depicted the imperial infrastructure: railways, telegraph wires, steamships and canals. With a focus on writers in South Africa and India, the author uses 'infrastructural reading' to demonstrate the connection between the depictions of these urban developments and anti-imperial resistance.

Peacebuilding and Spatial Transformation

Peacebuilding and Spatial Transformation
Title Peacebuilding and Spatial Transformation PDF eBook
Author Annika Bjorkdahl
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 150
Release 2017-05-18
Genre History
ISBN 1317409426

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This book investigates peacebuilding in post-conflict scenarios by analysing the link between peace, space and place. By focusing on the case studies of Cyprus, Kosovo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Northern Ireland and South Africa, the book provides a spatial reading of agency in peacebuilding contexts. It conceptualises peacebuilding agency in post-conflict landscapes as situated between place (material locality) and space (the imaginary counterpart of place), analysing the ways in which peacebuilding agency can be read as a spatial practice. Investigating a number of post-conflict cases, this book outlines infrastructures of power and agency as they are manifested in spatial practice. It demonstrates how spatial agency can take the form of conflict and exclusion on the one hand, but also of transformation towards peace over time on the other hand. Against this background, the book argues that agency drives place-making and space-making processes. Therefore, transformative processes in post-conflict societies can be understood as materialising through the active use and transformation of space and place. This book will be of interest to students of peacebuilding, peace and conflict studies, human geography and IR in general.

Spatial Complexity, Informatics, and Wildlife Conservation

Spatial Complexity, Informatics, and Wildlife Conservation
Title Spatial Complexity, Informatics, and Wildlife Conservation PDF eBook
Author Samuel A. Cushman
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages 458
Release 2009-12-21
Genre Science
ISBN 4431877711

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As Earth faces the greatest mass extinction in 65 million years, the present is a moment of tremendous foment and emergence in ecological science. With leaps in advances in ecological research and the technical tools available, scientists face the critical task of challenging policymakers and the public to recognize the urgency of our global crisis. This book focuses directly on the interplay between theory, data, and analytical methodology in the rapidly evolving fields of animal ecology, conservation, and management. The mixture of topics of particular current relevance includes landscape ecology, remote sensing, spatial modeling, geostatistics, genomics, and ecological informatics. The greatest interest to the practicing scientist and graduate student will be the synthesis and integration of these topics to provide a composite view of the emerging field of spatial ecological informatics and its applications in research and management.