Logics of dislocation : models, metaphors, and meanings of economic space / Trevor J. Barnes.

By: Barnes, Trevor J [Author]
Series: MappingsPublisher: New York : The Guilford, [1996]Copyright date: c1996Description: xii, 292 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 1572300337 (cloth : acidfree paper); 1572300396 (pbk. : acidfree paper)Subject(s): Economic geographyDDC classification: 330 LOC classification: HF1025 | .B333 1996Online resources: Contributor biographical information | Publisher description | Table of contents | Sample text Summary: Logics of dislocation is the first volume to systematically apply a postmodern sensibility to economic geography. In clear, jargon-free prose, author Trevor J. Barnes integrates a comprehensive review of economic geography's recent past with innovative work in economics, philosophy, and the sociology of science, clarifying key poststructuralist ideas and demonstrating their relevance to the field. In its critique of the rationalism and essentialism that characterizes prevailing models in the field, and its exploration of alternative conceptualizations, this book offers both a novel reconstruction of economic geography's past and a basis for a reconceived future.
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Item type Current location Home library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
BOOK BOOK COLLEGE LIBRARY
COLLEGE LIBRARY
SUBJECT REFERENCE
330 B263 1996 (Browse shelf) c.1 Available CITU-CL-25190
BOOK BOOK COLLEGE LIBRARY
COLLEGE LIBRARY
SUBJECT REFERENCE
330 B263 1996 (Browse shelf) c.2 Available CITU-CL-27353
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references (p. 253-284) and index.


Logics of dislocation is the first volume to systematically apply a postmodern sensibility to economic geography. In clear, jargon-free prose, author Trevor J. Barnes integrates a comprehensive review of economic geography's recent past with innovative work in economics, philosophy, and the sociology of science, clarifying key poststructuralist ideas and demonstrating their relevance to the field. In its critique of the rationalism and essentialism that characterizes prevailing models in the field, and its exploration of alternative conceptualizations, this book offers both a novel reconstruction of economic geography's past and a basis for a reconceived future.

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