Title: radical geography
1radical geography
2the geography is dead school of thought
- Have globalization and modern technology have
rendered distance and place irrelevant, or at
least less relevant than before? - Facebook distance learning telecommuting
global shopping mall culture liberation from
geography, borders, the physical world?
3the geography matters school
- local culture, customs, and arrangements of space
actually have a lot of power. - This story about the world being flat just
doesn't hold up in reality. - Communities around the world are reengaging with
activities that give them a sense of place,
like buying local produce at farmers markets,
and theyre also discovering the wonder in other
places from around the world (cumbia music,
Bollywood films, Japanese anime, Egyptian belly
dance, Afghan kebobs...) - Distance, as measured in an absolute sense, is
indeed less important, but place, space, locality
and relative distance between these things are
not. Global processes are really stretched
local to local processes, and they unfold in
localities that have a unique history and
character. (Geographies of Globalization,
Warwick Murray, 2006)
4Why radical geography?
- we have an inner need for "sense of place,"
psychologically spiritually. Were getting
bored of the blandscapes around us, and we want a
connection to the land to real living beings.
Living without relation to place is hard on the
soul. - if we know something about the space around us,
we're less likely to destroy the environment, or
allow it to be destroyed.
5Why radical geography?
- we need to be more aware of geography in order
to address the inequalities and imbalances of our
time. Six out of ten young Americans cant
identify Iraq on a map (in a 2005 study) fewer
than three in 10 think it is important to know
the locations of countries in the news.
6Why radical geography?
To summarize the ecocrises (ecological
economic) making themselves apparent in this
century can be viewed through a spatial lens.
They have been caused in part by poor
relationships to space, and they can be solved by
reorganizing how we use space and reconnecting to
space. Radical geography strives to perceive
the problems with the way we use space and
considers active ways to solve these problems.
7global awareness
this map was created by fivethirtyeight.com in
response to the idea that global warming would
only lessen global GDP by 5 it shows a world
with the countries which consume 5 of the GDP
erased
8imagining local solutions
9changing space and place
- In the U.S., we no longer experience the world
on the scale of a pedestrian (relative to our
ancestors, anyway). As Rebecca Solnit writes in
Wanderlust A History of Walking - The body is nothing more than a parcel in
transit, a chess piece dropped on another square
it does not move but is moved.
10changing space and place
- The way we experience space and place is
changing, due to - technology
- economic interests / economic coercion (streetcar
conspiracy, strip malls, etc.) - social factors (gated communities, fear)
- What are the implications of this?
11changing space and place
- "Transported every which way from childhood
through adolescence, young people lose their
independence. They fail to expand their horizons,
to see new surroundings, or to acquire
independence and liberty on their own. The
outside world dominated by the road bores, and
television or computer games beckon. A study
comparing ten-year-olds in a small, walkable
Vermont town and youngsters in a new Orange
County suburb showed a marked difference. The
Vermont children had three times the mobility,
i.e., the distance and places they could get to
on their own, while those in Orange County
watched four times as much television." Jane
Holtz Kay, Asphalt Nation
12changing space and place
- These changes arent always disastrous, though
the new technology of the bicycle helped women
become more mobile
13space and culture
- Our use of space shapes our culture, health, and
psychology. - Therefore, all of us should think about space,
not just geographers, architects, or planners
because we all are affected by the space around
us and how we interact with it! - But it's interesting to think about how other
cultures experience space. Consider in Western
culture, mountains are symbols of power to be
climbed and conquered (think of all the English
guys climbing the Himalayas back in the day,
etc.) However, - In Japan mountains have been imagined as the
centers of vast mandalas spreading across the
landscape like, in one scholar's words,
'overlapping flowers,' and approaching the center
of the mandala means approaching the source of
spiritual powerbut the approach may be
indirect. (Rebecca Solnit, Wanderlust)
14space and culture
- How we interpret a landscape depends on our
culture. - So our use of space changes our culture, and our
culture shapes our use of space... it's beginning
to seem like an endless cycle. - We might ask where does this "culture" come
from? Religious views inform our cosmology, to
some extent, as in the Japanese pilgrims that
used to walk around mountains, believing it was
sacrilegious to ascend to the summits.
15space and culture
- How we interpret our environments is also
informed by the existing economic (and political)
system. - Ownership "Imagine the countryside as a vast
body. Ownership pictures it divided into economic
units like internal organs, or like a cow divided
into cuts of meat, and certainly such division is
one way to organized a food-producing landscape,
but it doesn't explain why moors, mountains, and
forests should be similarly fenced and divided.."
(Solnit, Wanderlust, 162) - We understand space to be used for certain tasks
or activities, because of how the economic system
is constructed shopping space / office parks /
residential neighborhoods / recreational space /
etc
16space and culture
- Can we consciously decide how we want to
experience space? - What does that look and feel like?
- Is it psychological not feeling out of place or
intimidated when in a bad neighborhood or in a
corporate office park? - Is it active does it demand re-engineering /
revising the built environment, or re-purposing
existing spaces, to suit human health
happiness? - How can we encourage others to re-imagine the
space around them (us)? What cultural changes
need to take place?