EBOOK

Spaces of Danger

Culture and Power in the Everyday

Various AuthorsSeries: Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation
(0)
Pages
344
Year
2015
Language
English

About

These twelve original essays by geographers and anthropologists offer a deep critical understanding of Allan Pred's pathbreaking and eclectic cultural Marxist approach, with a focus on his concept of "situated ignorance": the production and reproduction of power and inequality by regimes of truth through strategically deployed misinformation, diversions, and silences. As the essays expose the cultural and material circumstances in which situated ignorance persists, they also add a previously underexplored spatial dimension to Walter Benjamin's idea of "moments of danger."
The volume invokes the aftermath of the July 2011 attacks by far-right activist Anders Breivik in Norway, who ambushed a Labor Party youth gathering and bombed a government building, killing and injuring many. Breivik had publicly and forthrightly declared war against an array of liberal attitudes he saw threatening Western civilization. However, as politicians and journalists interpreted these events for mass consumption, a narrative quickly emerged that painted Breivik as a lone madman and steered the discourse away from analysis of the resurgent right-wing racisms and nationalisms in which he was immersed.

The Breivik case is merely one of the most visible recent examples, say editors Heather Merrill and Lisa Hoffman, of the unchallenged production of knowledge in the public sphere. In essays that range widely in topic and setting-for example, brownfield development in China, a Holocaust memorial in Germany, an art gallery exhibit in South Africa-this volume peels back layers of "situated practices and their associated meaning and power relations." Spaces of Danger offers analytical and conceptual tools of a Predian approach to interrogate the taken-for-granted and make visible and legible that which is silenced.

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Reviews

"Overall, Spaces of Danger is a fitting tribute to an original thinker in Geography. The individual essays each hold the reader's interest, but more importantly they provide an interwoven web of key theoretical, analytic, methodological and conceptual insights into some of today's most vexing problems."
Marv Waterstone, Antipode: A Journal of Radical Geography
"This fine new biography of James McHenry offers a multidimensioned portrait of an overlooked founding father. Karen Robbins shows how this self-made northern Irish immigrant rose to prominence through service in the American Revolution and the early days of the new Republic. She also illuminates McHenry's private life, including his poetry, his family relations, and his dealings with his slaves.
Orvar Lofgren, coeditor of Managing Overflow in Affluent Societies

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