This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. Based on a panel discussion held at the American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting 2021, each contributor discusses what negativity means to them, and considers its various legacies and potential future trajectories. Along the way, the contributors offer ways of attending to negative spaces (voids, abysses, absences), affects (vulnerabilities, sad passions, incapacities, mortality) and politics (impasses, refusals, irreparabilities). However, rather than defining negativity narrowly, the paper stays with the diversity of work on negativity being undertaken by geographers and other scholars, discussing how varying perspectives expand or...
This is the final version of the article. Freely available from the publisher via the links in this ...
This session invites papers on the challenges of ‘making a difference’ with contemporary research on...
Where do tendencies to exclude, discriminate, and dominate originate from? Why for many do harmful t...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
Negative Geographies is the first edited collection to chart the political, conceptual, and ethical ...
International audienceThe advent of Modernity was accompanied by a radical criticism of traditional ...
Recent theoretical debates in human geography have been characterised by a preference for ontologica...
Over the last decade, affect has emerged as one of the most prominent concepts within human geograph...
Humanity has achieved planetary scale influence without planetary scale understanding. The historica...
Scholars across the social sciences and humanities have increasingly questioned the meaning and purp...
This paper traces the origins and inspiration of Cosgrove and Jackson's () paper ‘New directions in ...
The information, practices and views in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessari...
This paper draws on a multimethod ethnographic study, conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Shirebrook,...
This is the final version of the article. Freely available from the publisher via the links in this ...
This session invites papers on the challenges of ‘making a difference’ with contemporary research on...
Where do tendencies to exclude, discriminate, and dominate originate from? Why for many do harmful t...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
This paper reflects on the status of ‘negativity’ in contemporary social and geographical thought. B...
Negative Geographies is the first edited collection to chart the political, conceptual, and ethical ...
International audienceThe advent of Modernity was accompanied by a radical criticism of traditional ...
Recent theoretical debates in human geography have been characterised by a preference for ontologica...
Over the last decade, affect has emerged as one of the most prominent concepts within human geograph...
Humanity has achieved planetary scale influence without planetary scale understanding. The historica...
Scholars across the social sciences and humanities have increasingly questioned the meaning and purp...
This paper traces the origins and inspiration of Cosgrove and Jackson's () paper ‘New directions in ...
The information, practices and views in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessari...
This paper draws on a multimethod ethnographic study, conducted between 2016 and 2017 in Shirebrook,...
This is the final version of the article. Freely available from the publisher via the links in this ...
This session invites papers on the challenges of ‘making a difference’ with contemporary research on...
Where do tendencies to exclude, discriminate, and dominate originate from? Why for many do harmful t...