Economic Geography
The new imperial geography
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Economic and social geography
18 The new imperial geography
John Lovering 1 A geographical–economic question? Not sure we can help Imagine you are a community representative, a businessperson, or just curious, and you want to ask questions like: ‘How does this place (region, city, small country) work? Why can my daughter get a job here when my son can’t? What can be done to make things better?’ You might think the best person to ask is an economic geographer. Economic geographers tend to fall into two distinct camps. Members of the first would typically respond with a species of dazzling poetry about how fascinating diversity is, how everything is all mixed up, how it looks different depending on who you are, and how there is no last word (as if you didn’t know that already). Members of the second would scrub out your questions, replace them with one about ‘competitiveness’, then answer it by declaring that public resources should be diverted to give special help to this or that set of special interests. Of course, most economic geographers are decent folk and wouldn’t do either of these so crudely. But many would feel it professionally prudent to make at least a nod towards one or both. For these two pole positions in Post-Cultural- Turn Economic Geography (henceforth PCTEG) preoccupy the attention of publishers, university appointment committees, and funding bodies. Yet neither constitutes progress in any familiar sense of the word because they do not answer questions any better than in the past. They are about asking different questions altogether. This is not, despite pop interpretations of Kuhn, how sciences get better. For example, in their recent survey Barnes et al. (2004) note that the story of recent change in economic geography is not one that everyone agrees signifies progress, and ask how we should interpret it. This chapter offers one interpreta- tion: that it reveals geography’s excessive embrace of the Empire of Capital. This has nothing to do with the wonderfully widened range of topics (there’s nothing inherently Imperialist about studying gardening). The complicity arises from the cognitive and normative frameworks within which these are all too often set, which smuggle in Empire as the un-named, unconscious, horizon of authorised thought and practice. Since this is an Empire characterised by denial, this is achieved through ideas presented as inherently anti-foundational, critical, 222 John Lovering destabilising, engaged, inclusive, and other labels giving the impression that they are definitely not part of a conservative orthodoxy, like rebel clothing in designer shops. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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