Results for ' Geography, Medieval'

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  1.  9
    Daniel Birkholz, Harley Manuscript Geographies: Literary History and Medieval Miscellany. (Manchester Medieval Literature and Culture 35.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020. Pp. xii, 327; black-and-white figure. $120. ISBN: 978-1-5261-4040-1. [REVIEW]Daron Burrows - 2022 - Speculum 97 (3):786-787.
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  2.  32
    Mapping sacred geography in medieval india: The case of the twelve jyotirliṅgas. [REVIEW]Benjamin J. Fleming - 2009 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 13 (1):51-81.
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  3.  34
    Psychoanalytical Geography.Corin Braga - 2008 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 7 (20):134-149.
    The constructing principles of ancient cartography were for most of the time non-mimetic and non-empirical, so that the maps build on their basis had a most fantastic shape. We could safely call this kind of non-realistic geography – symbolic geography. In this paper, I focus on the psychological projections that shaped the form of pre-modern maps. The main epistemological instrument for such an approach is offered by Freudian psychoanalysis and Jungian analytical psychology. In ”psychoanalytical geography”, Freudian schemes of interpretation (the (...)
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  4.  10
    Alternative Geographies.John R. Short - 2000 - Prentice-Hall.
    An accessible and groundbreaking text that takes a fresh view of contemporary geographical issues by looking at the geographies we have lost. Geography means writing about the world. Alternative ways of writing about the world are introduced and critically evaluated. The book discusses medieval cosmologies, Renaissance magic, feng shui, and the knowledge systems of indigenous people. Alternative Geographies provides an alternative way of looking, describing and understanding the world.
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  5.  31
    Geography, print culture and the Renaissance: “The road less travelled by”.Robert Mayhew - 2001 - History of European Ideas 27 (4):349-369.
    This essay re-examines the connections between geography, print and the Renaissance. Starting with an historiographical survey of the ways in which these categories have previously been connected, the essay points to an explanatory lacuna in the accepted view. It is widely agreed that geographical writing responded remarkably slowly to the changing European knowledge of the globe initiated during “the age of discovery”, major transformation away from ancient and medieval patterns of global description only coming a century after Columbus. Yet (...)
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  6.  7
    Meredith Cohen and Fanny Madeline, eds., Space in the Medieval West: Places, Territories, and Imagined Geographies. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2014. Pp. xvi, 245; 17 black-and-white figures, 15 maps, and 4 tables. $119.95. ISBN: 978-1-4724-0237-0. [REVIEW]Sarah Thompson - 2015 - Speculum 90 (2):530-531.
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  7.  4
    The medieval new: ambivalence in an age of innovation.Patricia Clare Ingham - 2015 - Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
    Despite the prodigious inventiveness of the Middle Ages, the era is often characterized as deeply suspicious of novelty. But if poets and philosophers urged caution about the new, Patricia Clare Ingham contends, their apprehension was less the result of a blind devotion to tradition than a response to radical expansions of possibility in diverse realms of art and science. Discovery and invention provoked moral questions in the Middle Ages, serving as a means to adjudicate the ethics of invention and opening (...)
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  8.  10
    Medieval philosophy redefined: the development of cenoscopic science, AD 354 to 1644 (from the birth of Augustine to the death of Poinsot).John N. Deely - 2010 - Scranton [Pa.]: University of Scranton Press.
    Medieval philosophy redefined: the Latin age, c. 400-1635 -- The geography of the Latin age -- The fading light of antiquity: Neoplatonism and the tree of Porphyry, c. 3rd-5th cent. AD -- Founding fathers of the Latin Age: Augustine ([d.] 430) and Boethius ([d.] c. 525) -- The five centuries of darkness, c. 525-1025 -- Dawning of the main development : Anselm ([d.] 1109), Abaelard ([d.] 1142), Lombard ([d.] 1160) -- Enter Aristotle, c. 1150 -- Albert ([d.] 1280) and (...)
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  9. What Can a Medieval Friar Teach Us About the Internet? Deriving Criteria of Justice for Cyberlaw from Thomist Natural Law Theory.Brandt Dainow - 2013 - Philosophy and Technology 26 (4):459-476.
    This paper applies a very traditional position within Natural Law Theory to Cyberspace. I shall first justify a Natural Law approach to Cyberspace by exploring the difficulties raised by the Internet to traditional principles of jurisprudence and the difficulties this presents for a Positive Law Theory account of legislation of Cyberspace. This will focus on issues relating to geography. I shall then explicate the paradigm of Natural Law accounts, the Treatise on Law, by Thomas Aquinas. From this account will emerge (...)
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  10.  21
    City Typology of Medieval Islamic Geographers: A Terminological View.Mesut Can - 2018 - Cumhuriyet İlahiyat Dergisi 22 (2):1137-1163.
    The spread of Islam from the Arabian Peninsula to the North Africa and al-Andalus in the west, to the Chinese borders and the Indian Subcontinent in the east, helped Muslims to establish close contact with many different cultures. One of the consequences of this is that both the increase in scientific accumulation and the emergence of new needs in military, financial and similar aspects accelerated the studies on geography. Islamic geographers of the first period, not only did they describe the (...)
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  11.  10
    Sonograms of Desire, Medieval and Modern.Judith A. Peraino - 2018 - Paragraph 41 (1):26-41.
    This essay unites musicology's concern with the discursive force of organized sound, and sound studies' concern with the discursive force of sonic environments, recording formats and media networks, to consider how the widely transmitted medieval song ‘Lanqan li jorn son lonc en mai’ attributed to Jaufre Rudel produces sonograms that map distance and desire in the chasm between the Islamic East and the Christian West. The first half of the essay examines ‘Lanqan li jorn son lonc en mai’ in (...)
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  12.  12
    Evaluation of the Book "Black Rage: The Rebellion of Negro Slaves in the Medieval Islamic World (869-883)".Mehmet Deri - 2024 - Metafizika 7 (1):192-196.
    Prof. Dr. Mustafa Demirci's monograph "Black Rage: The Rebellion of Negro Slaves in the Medieval Islamic World (869-883)" on the 'Zanj rebellion' that took place between 869-883 A.D., during the Abbasid period, and was led by the Ali b. Muhammad, is one of the most important studies both in terms of its subject matter and the author's approach and perspective on the subject. The study, which was prepared with a rich academic literature using basic sources and modern research on (...)
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  13. The value of a geographical perspective.Self-Contempt Geography'S'hidden - 1985 - In R. J. Johnston (ed.), The Future of Geography. Methuen. pp. 92.
     
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  14.  8
    Songlines, Sacred Texts and Cultural Code: Between Australia and Early Medieval Ireland.Constant J. Mews - 2019 - In Peter Wong, Sherah Bloor, Patrick Hutchings & Purushottama Bilimoria (eds.), Considering Religions, Rights and Bioethics: For Max Charlesworth. Springer Verlag. pp. 201-217.
    This paper builds on Max Charlesworth’s evolving interest in aboriginal spirituality by reflecting on potential affinities, as well as great differences, between the notion of the indigenous songline and sacred texts. In particular I suggest possible parallels between the travels of a spirit ancestor along a particular route, and the account of the journey of a specific early Irish saint, itself modelled on the motif of the pilgrim within Jewish and Christian Scripture. Charlesworth always insisted that religion could never be (...)
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  15. Cotton Titus A. xx and Rawlinson B. 214.Medieval Latin Poetic Anthologies - 1977 - Mediaeval Studies 39:281-330.
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  16. Proximity’s dilemma and the difficulties of moral response to the distant sufferer.The Geography Of Goodness - 2003 - The Monist 86 (3):355-366.
    The work of the French Lithuanian Jewish philosopher, Emmanuel Levinas, describes a perceptive rethinking of the possibility of concrete acts of goodness in the world, a rethinking never more necessary than now, in the wake of the cruel realities of the twentieth century—ten million dead in the First World War, forty million dead in the Second World War, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, the Soviet gulags, the grand slaughter of Mao’s “Great Leap Forward,” the pointless and gory Vietnam War, the Cambodian self-genocide and (...)
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  17.  11
    heidegger And MedievAl PhilosoPhy.A. ForgetFulness oF MedievAl - 2013 - In Francois Raffoul & Eric S. Nelson (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Heidegger. Bloomsbury Academic.
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  18.  14
    Galeno, libro sobre la buena condición.Y. Medieval - 2012 - Ideas Y Valores 61 (149):155-165.
    La presente versión del tratado De Bono Habitu Liber o El libro sobre la buena condición, de Galeno de Pérgamo, se presenta al lector de habla hispana como un acercamiento a la prolífca obra flosófca de quien fuera reconocido en su época como un notable médico anatomista y físico. Los argumentos expuestos por el autor acerca de la ‘buena condición’ dan cuenta de la infuencia retórica de Platón y Aristóteles, al mismo tiempo, de las enseñanzas médicas de Hipócrates. Junto al (...)
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  19. Paul J. Cornish is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan. He defended his dissertation, Rule and Subjection: The Concept of 'Dominium'in Augustine and Aquinas, at the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1995. His publications include:'John Courtney Murray and Thomas Aquinas on Obedience and the Civil Conversation', Vera Lex: Journal. [REVIEW]Medieval Europe - 2010 - European Journal of Political Theory 9 (2):131-132.
  20. Mass media: Visualizing the last supper in.Late Medieval Italian Plays - 2006 - Mediaevalia 27:185.
     
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  21.  2
    Opus maius: Brief an Papst Clemens IV.: Opus maius: Teile I, II und VI: Brief über die geheimen Werke der Natur und der Kunst.Roger Bacon - 2017 - Hamburg: Felix Meiner Verlag.
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  22. Previously Published.Mediaeval Studies - 2009 - In David Papineau (ed.), Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 4.
     
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  23.  9
    Celtic cosmology: perspectives from Ireland and Scotland.Ann Dooley, Séamus Mac Mathúna, Jacqueline Borsje, Gregory Toner & John William Shaw (eds.) - 2014 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
    The essays in this collection, many originally presented at a 2008 colloquium on Celtic Cosmology and the Power of Words, aim to examine the worldviews held by the Celtic peoples, particularly the Gaelic (Irish and Scottish) perspectives. Texts and inscriptions, some of them pre-Christian, in Celtic languages and in Celtic Latin provide the sources for the worldviews under study. This area of research is also linked to that of the power of words, which refers to human belief in powerful speech (...)
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  24.  27
    Robert Arthur Donkin 1928-2006.Alan Rh Baker - 2011 - In Baker Alan Rh (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 172, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, X. pp. 115.
    Robin Donkin was an exceptional scholar in the field of historical geography, particularly concerning Latin America and the domestication of plants and animals globally. His early research was on the effect of the Cistercians on medieval landscape, and he held posts at the University of Edinburgh and the University of Brimingham. Donkin then lectured in Latin American geography at the University of Cambridge. He was a Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge and was elected as a Fellow of the British (...)
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  25.  32
    Wondrous Truths: The Improbable Triumph of Modern Science.J. D. Trout - 2016 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    A fresh, daring, and genuine alternative to the traditional story of scientific progress Explaining the world around us, and the life within it, is one of the most uniquely human drives, and the most celebrated activity of science. Good explanations are what provide accurate causal accounts of the things we wonder at, but explanation's earthly origins haven't grounded it: we have used it to account for the grandest and most wondrous mysteries in the natural world. Explanations give us a sense (...)
  26.  27
    Edging Toward Iberia.Jean Dangler - 2006 - Diacritics 36 (3/4):12-26.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Edging Toward IberiaJean Dangler (bio)As I edge toward a complete definition of medieval Iberia, with its constellation of Muslim and Christian realms and Jewish communities from approximately 500 to 1500 CE, I strive for precise word use, for unity and accuracy, but I am always on the perimeter of Iberia’s fullness. I am always at its edge trying to capture it all by researching Castilian kingdoms here and (...)
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  27. Popular science as knowledge: early modern Iberian-American repertorios de los tiempos.S. Orozco-Echeverri - 2023 - Galilaeana 20 (1):34-61.
    Iberian repertorios de los tiempos stemmed from Medieval almanacs and calendars. During the sixteenth century significant editorial, conceptual and material changes in repertorios incorporated astronomy, geography, chronology and natural philosophy. From De Li’s Repertorio (1492) to Zamorano’s Cronología (1585), the genre evolved from simple almanacs to more complex cosmological works which circulated throughout the Iberian-American world. This article claims that repertorios are a form of syncretic knowledge rather than “popular science” by relying on the concept of “knowledge in transit”. (...)
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  28.  4
    Big History.David Christian - 2008 - Teaching Co..
    Part 1. Lecture 1. What is big history? ; Lecture 2. Moving across multiple scales ; Lecture 3. Simplicity and complexity ; Lecture 4. Evidence and the nature of science ; Lecture 5. Threshold 1, Origins of Big Bang cosmology ; Lecture 6. How did everything begin? ; Lecture 7. Threshold 2, The first stars and galaxies ; Lecture 8. Threshold 3, Making chemical elements ; Lecture 9. Threshold 4, The earth and the solar system ; Lecture 10. The early (...)
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  29.  43
    Passing strange and wonderful: aesthetics, nature, and culture.Yi-fu Tuan - 1993 - New York: Kodansha International.
    Conventional wisdom suggests that aesthetic experiences - those moments when the senses come to life - are important only after more basic needs have been met. In this inspiring wealth of provocative ideas, Yi-Fu Tuan demonstrates that feeling and beauty are essential parts of life and society. The aesthetic is shown to be not merely one aspect of culture but its central core - both its driving force and its ultimate goal. Beginning with the individual and the physical world, the (...)
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  30. Les perceptions et représentations de l'espace: Un lieu théologique disputé des temps médiévaux.P. Lecrivain - 1999 - Recherches de Science Religieuse 87 (4):519-549.
    Selon un lieu commun, la géographie médiévale se réduirait à une vaste parenthèse ouverte entre la fin du siècle d'or de l'Empire romain et la renaissance des grandes découvertes du XV° siècle. Mais quelle réalité s'agit-il de représenter ? Car toute représentation est tributaire, non seulement de conceptions particulières, mais aussi de moyens techniques qui ont présidé à son élaboration. Dans cet article, le lien entre la réalité et ses images, qui organise habituellement l'histoire de la cartographie, sera relâché au (...)
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  31.  20
    Kapila, founder of Sāṃkhya and avatāra of Viṣṇu: with a translation of Kapilāsurisaṃvāda.Knut A. Jacobsen - 2008 - New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers.
    Illustrations: 24 B/w Illustrations Description: In the Hindu tradition Kapila is admired and worshipped as a philosopher, a divinity, an avatara of Visnu and as a powerful ascetic. This book is the first monographic study of this important figure. The book deals with Kapila in the Veda, the Sramana traditions, the Epics and the Puranas, in the Samkhya system of religious thought and in the ritual traditions of many contemporary Hindu traditions. Kapila is an important figure in the sacred geography (...)
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  32.  10
    Enclosed beyond Alexander’s Barrier.Adam Silverstein - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 134 (2):287.
    This is a review article of Gog and Magog in Early Christian and Islamic Sources: Sallam’s Quest for Alexander’s Wall. By Emeri van Donzel and Andrea Schmidt. Brill’s Inner Asian Library, vol. 22. Leiden: Brill, 2010. Pp. xx + 271. $147; and Mapping Frontiers across Medieval Islam: Geography, Translation and the ‘Abbāsid Empire. By Travis Zadeh. Library of Middle East History, vol. 27. London: i. B. tauris, 2011. Pp. xiv + 316. £59.50, $99.
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  33.  12
    Ecological reciprocity: a treatise on kindness.Michael Tobias - 2021 - New York: Nova Science Publishers. Edited by Jane Morrison, Niki Stavrou & Michael Tobias.
    This elegant treatise examines the nature of kindness through the fascinating lenses and contexts of ancient, medieval and contemporary philosophy, natural history, theories of mind, of natural selection, eco-psychology and sociobiology. It challenges the reader to consider the myriad potential consequences of human behavior, examining various iconographic moments from the history of art and science as a precursor to the concept and vital potentials for ecological conversion. Focusing on the fundamental mechanisms of reciprocity among humans, other species, communities and (...)
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  34.  10
    Mapping Dante: A Digital Platform for the Study of Places in the Commedia.Andrea Gazzoni - 2017 - Humanist Studies and the Digital Age 5 (1):82-95.
    This essay presents Mapping Dante, a project for the study of the geography of the Divine Comedy through a digital map visualizing all the place-names mentioned in the text. First, the project background is sketched out by a concise overview of the history of the reception and visualization of Dante’s geography, of the constellation of digital Dante projects, and of GIS literary mapping. Second, specific stages and issues of Mapping Dante are discussed: the making of the dataset and its categories, (...)
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  35.  6
    “Siyah Öfke: Ortaçağ İslam Dünyasında Zenci Kölelerin İsyanı (869-883)” adlı kitabın dəyərləndirilməsi.Mehmet Deri - 2024 - Metafizika 7 (1):192-196.
    Prof. Dr. Mustafa Demirci's monograph "Black Rage: The Rebellion of Negro Slaves in the Medieval Islamic World (869-883)" on the 'Zanj rebellion' that took place between 869-883 A.D., during the Abbasid period, and was led by the Ali b. Muhammad, is one of the most important studies both in terms of its subject matter and the author's approach and perspective on the subject. The study, which was prepared with a rich academic literature using basic sources and modern research on (...)
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  36.  69
    Geography and ethics: journeys in a moral terrain.James D. Proctor & David Marshall Smith (eds.) - 1999 - New York: Routledge.
    Geography and Ethics examines the place of geography in ethics and of ethics in geography by drawing together specially commissioned contributors from distinguished scholars from around the world.
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  37. Geographies of exclusion: society and difference in the West.David Sibley - 1995 - New York: Burns & Oates.
    Geographies of Exclusion identifies forms of social and spatial exclusion and subsequently examines the fate of knowledge of space and society which has been produced by members of excluded groups. Evaluating writing on urban society by women and black writers, David Sibley asks why such work is neglected by the academic establishment, suggesting that both the practices which result in the exclusion of minorities and those which result in the exclusion of knowledge have important implications for theory and method in (...)
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  38.  15
    The geography of the everyday: toward an understanding of the given.Robert E. Sullivan - 2017 - Athens: University of Georgia Press.
    Starting with Goffman and ending with Foucault -- The spacetimeplace "thing" -- Time goes vertical; space yields in -- What Marx brought in from the cold : reproduction -- Bringing in the body -- Bring in geography.
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  39.  26
    The Geography of Morals: Varieties of Moral Possibility.Owen Flanagan - 2016 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The Geography of Morals is a work of extraordinary ambition: an indictment of the parochialism of Western philosophy, a comprehensive dialogue between cultural and psychological anthropology, recent work in empirical moral psychology, behavioral economics, and cross-cultural philosophy.
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  40. Geography, history and concepts: a student's guide.Arild Holt-Jensen - 1999 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
    Totally revised and updated, written especially for students, the third edition of Geography – History and Concepts is the definitive undergraduate introduction to the history, philosophy and methodology of Human Geography. Accessible and comprehensive, the work comprises five sections: - What is Geography?: a historical overview of the discipline and an explanation of its organization - The Foundations of Geography: examines Geography from Antiquity to the early modern period; the discussion includes detailed explanations of environmental determinism; the French School; landscape; (...)
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  41. Postmodern geographies: the reassertion of space in critical social theory.Edward W. Soja - 1989 - New York: Verso.
    Preface and Postscript Combining a Preface with a Postscript seems a particularly apposite way to introduce (and conclude) a collection of essays on ...
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  42.  77
    Geographies of Meaningful Living.Cheshire Calhoun - 2014 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 32 (1):15-34.
    Because it is significantly unclear what ‘meaningful’ does or should pick out when applied to a life, any account of meaningful living will be constructive and not merely clarificatory. Where in our conceptual geography is ‘meaningful’ best located? What conceptual work do we want the concept to do? What I call agent-independent and agent-independent-plus conceptions of meaningfulness locate ‘meaningful’ within the conceptual geography of agent-independent evaluative standards and assign ‘meaningful’ the work of commending lives. I argue that the not wholly (...)
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  43.  29
    Geography and the production of space in nineteenth-century American literature.Hsuan L. Hsu - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Geography and the Production of Space in Nineteenth-Century American Literature, Hsuan L. Hsu examines how literature represents different kinds of spaces ranging from the single-family home to the globe. He focuses on authors such as Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville and Sarah Orne Jewett, who drew on literary tools such as rhetoric, setting, and point of view to mediate between individuals and different kinds of spaces. These authors used forms such as the regional sketch, the domestic (...)
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  44.  50
    Applied Geography: A World Perspective.Antoine Bailly & Lay James Gibson (eds.) - 2004 - Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    Applied Geography, A World Perspective reviews progress in applied geography in different regions of the world. It does this through the eyes of an international panel of highly regarded academic practitioners. The book offers new prospects on the use of established approaches and explores exciting new territories. Together, the contributors provide a comprehensive picture of applied geography today. This book is of relevance to faculty and graduate students in the fields of geography, planning, public policy, regional science and other related (...)
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  45.  15
    Geography: history and concepts.Arild Holt-Jensen - 2018 - Los Angeles: Sage Publications.
    This introduction to the history, philosophy and methodology of human geography explores complex ideas in an intelligible and accessible style. It takes into account the new developments in geographical thought and methods.
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  46.  23
    Geography: why it matters.Alexander B. Murphy - 2018 - Medford, Massachusetts: Polity.
    Geography's nature and perspectives -- Spaces -- Places -- Nature and society -- Why we all need geography -- Coda -- Notes -- Further reading -- Index.
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  47.  6
    Gendered Geographies of Reproductive Tourism.Daisy Deomampo - 2013 - Gender and Society 27 (4):514-537.
    This article explores the intersections of power within transnational surrogacy in India, using the lens of geography to examine surrogate women’s and commissioning parents’ experiences and perceptions of space and mobility. The author analyzes ethnographic data within a geographical framework to examine how actors embody and experience power relations through space and movement, revealing how power is not simply about who moves and who doesn’t. Rather, in recognizing the specificity of the Indian context, and how different actors inhabit and move (...)
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  48.  7
    Geography meets Gendlin: an exploration of disciplinary potential through artistic practice.Janet Banfield - 2016 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book makes a timely and engaging contribution to geography’s resurgent interest in art and artistic practice, as well as to growing geographical concerns with embodied or pre-reflective experience. It introduces Eugene Gendlin’s philosophical and methodological work to stimulate geographical thinking and practice, and explores its disciplinary potential through innovative practice-based research into artistic spatial experience. Gendlin’s philosophy and techniques for articulating the pre-reflective are explained and illustrated using artists’ accounts of their practices, both retrospectively and during their practice. The (...)
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  49.  10
    Sustainable geography.Roger Brunet - 2010 - Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
    Sustainable Geography recalls the system and laws of geographical space production, tackles the hardcore of geography and presents models and organizations through a regional analysis and the dynamics of territorial structures and methods. The book also describes the general idea of discontinuities, trenches, the anti-dialectical and redivision-uniformity in the globalization and addresses the Transnational Urban Systems and Urban Network in Europe.
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  50.  57
    Neural geographies: feminism and the microstructure of cognition.Elizabeth Ann Wilson - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    Neural Geographies draws together recent feminist and deconstructive theories, early Freudian neurology and contemporary connectionist theories of cognition. In this original work, Elizabeth A. Wilson explores the convergence between Derrida, Freud and recent cognitive theory to pursue two important issues: the nature of cognition and neurology, and the politics of feminist and critical interventions into contemporary scientific psychology. This book seeks to reorient the usual presumptions of critical studies of the sciences by addressing the divisions between the static and the (...)
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