Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Using this Space as My Space
Queer Space is thusly those areas of the built environment where those activities labeled 'abnormal' or against the norm reside. Those closets of man-made materials set in the rural areas of the urban - parks, public places, open spaces, and the rural areas in the country - those places in the mountains, the fields and plains where people meet and exchange what a 'majority' would call deviant or against the norm. These spaces are also the spaces of misunderstandings, homophobia, hatred, violence, rape, muggings, and assaults. All of these areas are. Is that what ties them together or is it something else?
Thursday, October 4, 2007
Continuing the Conversation
This arguement also leads into another pet-peeve of mine, the importance of unions. At several of my lowly, entry-level jobs I have held, I mentioned the fact that, with a union, we could have greater say the outcome of our work and surroundings. 'Oh no', one middle-aged woman told me. 'Unions are terrible, they make you not work, they tell you what to do,' etc. etc. I really had no idea what a bad name unions had gotten in the last generation, with many afraid of them to the point of getting completely screwed by corporations. Does it not make common sense to unite and stand against capital, which exists only to reproduce itself, not help labor, instead of taking whatever scraps they decide to give us? It boggles the mind!
These two themes are inextricably linked, in my opinion, as the American people are blinded by consumerism and cheap brick-a-brack at the expense of American jobs, then complain that all the companies are leaving. The housing bubble, mortgage crisis, and incredible debt burdens that we all now carry in some form further clog thos arteries of intellectualism, environmentalism, humanitarianism, and self-lessness in general. It is long past time for people to wake up and exercise their minds. Get involved, watch the news, take up an issue, care about something besides your own life-bubble! If you don't, somebody else will and I can guarantee that they could care less about you.
Thursday, June 28, 2007
A question of place and space
Sunday, June 3, 2007
That shadowy discipline...
A few weeks ago my department gave its comprehensive exam for the MA program. In hindsight, it occurred to me that the entire exam could have been built around the question what is geography?
Many of the times that I've been asked about this, I hit a stumbling block. My areas of interest converge around the social, cultural, and psychological aspects of geography--aspects that are as much theoretical as practical, abstract as concrete, and intangible as mappable. I'll mention something I'm reading and inevitably the response will be, "Isn't that really sociology [or anthropology, or philosophy, etc.]?" Yes, but...
I came to geography from a trail of other disciplines: archaeology and anthropology, criminology, psychology. I've always loved the potential for cross-pollenation, the inspiration that one field can take from another. To me, geography has provided the perfect synthesis of all these fields and more, all tied together by the thread of place. It all makes perfect sense to me--but explaining this on the spot to someone of the conviction that all social sciences should fall into discrete boxes is a challenge. And really, I'm not so good at off-the-cuff kinds of things.
In the end, I usually return to what has become sort of a mantra for me: If you can use the words space, place, landscape, or topography, chances are a geographer is interested in it. And that's what I plan on talking about here. Pigeonholes be damned.
Introductions
A little about our contributors:
Our current contributors are Gavia Immer, Globalfreak, Katie, and Placemaker. Here's a little about each of us.
Gavia Immer has just finished an MA in geography and has several years of experience as a GIS professional. His interests include physical geography and technical applications.
Globalfreak is finishing an MA in geography and an MA in sociology, looking to pursue a PhD in geography in the near future. His areas of interest include political and cultural geography, landscapes, and social theory and policy.
Katie is finishing an MA in geography and will be entering a PhD program in planning in the fall. Her interests include social theory, postmodernism, and the works of David Harvey.
Placemaker is working on an MA in geography with the intent to earn an PhD in the discipline. Her areas of interest are geographical phenomenology, cyberspace, place identity and place making, developmental geography, and urban design.
As this blog grows we hope to add more contributors. Keep an eye out for new contributor introductions along the way.