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  1. Making Moral Imaginations. Research Ethics, Pedagogy, and Professional Human Geography.Iain Hay - 1998 - Ethics, Place and Environment 1 (1):55-75.
    This paper exhorts geographers to become more active in debate about ethical research practice. It also suggests that ethical theory, practical problems, and lessons learned from postmodern thought make the prospects of establishing prescriptive codes of ethics unlikely. Instead, flexible prompts for moral contemplation might be used to encourage careful thought on matters of ethics. Because the practical feasibility of moral prompts rests on the existence of moral imaginations, it is vital to consider ways in which those imaginations might be (...)
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  • Geographical Imaginations.Derek Gregory - 1994 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Geographical Imaginations is at once a profound and penetrating reading of geography as a discipline and a discourse, and also an imaginative and sustained attempt to situate that discourse within the fabric of contemporary social theory. Its focus is on understanding the ways in which social life is variously embedded in place, space and landscape. In the fulfillment of this objective, historical imagination, textual exegesis, philosophical scrutiny, sociological interpretation, and geographical sensitivity are interwoven in such a way as to move (...)
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  • Feminism and Geography: The Limits of Geographical Knowledge.Gillian Rose (ed.) - 1993 - Polity.
    Geography is a subject that throughout its history has been dominated by men; men have undertaken the heroic explorations that form the mythology of its foundation, men have written most of its texts, and, as many feminist geographers have remarked, men's interests have structured what counts as legitimate geographical knowledge. This book offers a sustained examination of the masculinism of contemporary geographical discourses. Drawing on the work of feminist theories about the intersection of power, knowledge and subjectivity, Rose discusses different (...)
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  • Doing ethics in context: South African perspectives.Charles Villa-Vicencio & John W. De Gruchy (eds.) - 1994 - Cape Town: D. Philip.
  • Mapping the subject: geographies of cultural transformation.Steve Pile & N. J. Thrift (eds.) - 1995 - New York: Routledge.
    With no precise boundaries, always on the move and too complex to be defined by space and time, is it possible to map the human subject? This book attempts to do just this, exploring the places of the subject in contemporary culture. The editors approach this subject from four main aspects--its construction, sexuality, limits and politics--using a wide ranging review of literature on subjectivity across the social and human sciences. The first part of the book establishes the idea that the (...)
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  • Thrid World Women and the Politics of Feminism.Chandra Talpade Mohanty - 1991 - Indiana University Press.
  • Yearning: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics.Bell Hooks - 1992 - Hypatia 7 (2):177-187.
    A new collection of critical essays from bell hooks takes as its theme the deep longing for a critical voice. I explore some motifs that operate across the divergent topics of her essays. She writes of the dangers of commodification, of "reassuring" images, of individualism. I also explore the paths of hooks's uniquely black postmodernism: her critique of various essentialisms, her philosophically important conception of subjectivity, and her beautiful and powerful transformations of multiple discourses.
     
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  • Feminism and Methodology.Sandra Harding - 1989 - Hypatia 3 (3):162-164.