Economic Geography
The new economic geography of the 1970s: economic
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Economic and social geography
The new economic geography of the 1970s: economic
geography’s engagement with Marxian political economy The limitations of both location theories and behavioural critiques of them led economic geographers to search for more powerful conceptualisations of the processes that generated geographies of economies. In their search for more powerful explanations, economic geographers increasingly turned to Marxian political economy as a source of theoretical inspiration. Marxian political econ- omy is centred on powerful concepts of structure, of the social structural rela- tions that defined particular types of societies and offered a powerful challenge to the spatial fetishism of locational analysis and spatial science – that is, to the belief that spatial forms could be explained by spatial processes devoid of social content. In the 1970s, then, economic geographers turned to Marxian political econ- omy in order to get more powerful insights into social processes and the social grounding and relations of the economy, of what defined capitalist economies as capitalist. They recognised the need to get below and beyond the surface appear- ances of capitalist economies and their geographies to those structural relations and processes that had causal effectivity and that could help explain why capital- ist economies and their geographies were as they were. This above all was the central issue. The concepts of value theory provided the tools to do so. Concepts such as mode of production, the dialectical class structural relationship between capital and labour, commodities and their exchange value and use value, labour- power and the labour process, and uneven development allowed a much more powerful understanding of the geographies of capitalist economies than had hitherto been possible. Extensions to include notions such as social formations and the articulation of modes of production allowed a more sophisticated under- standing of the relations between capitalist and non-capitalist economies and social relations, deepening understanding of the mosaic of uneven development at multi- ple spatial scales. Without doubt, the most powerful and sophisticated version of this 50 Ray Hudson revived and enriched historical–geographical materialism emerged in 1982 with the publication of David Harvey’s (1982) magisterial account of The Limits to Capital. Despite subsequent critiques, economic geographers continue to argue the case for Marxian political economy. For example, Doreen Massey (1995: 307), in another of the major landmark publications of the last four decades in economic geography, Spatial Divisions of Labour, was at pains to emphasise the continuing relevance of Marxian political economy. For Massey, the law of value enables us to think through the broad structures of the economy and forms the ‘absolutely essential basis for some central concepts – exploitation for instance’. Value theory therefore helps elucidate the social relationships specific to capitalism and its economic geographies – while recognising that there are things that value theory cannot deal with: for example, issues such as emotion and feelings cannot be captured in value categories. In short, economic geographers continue to need Marxian political economy but they do not only need Marxian political economy. As Massey’s work emphasised, specifying precisely how particular geographies of capitalist economies evolved within the structural limits defining economies as capitalist remained problematic and in turn led economic geographers to search for other approaches to theorising, either as complements to, or as alternatives to, Marxian approaches. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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