PART ONE: IMAGINING HUMAN GEOGRAPHIES | |
Place | Tim Cresswell |
Mobilities | Johanna Waters |
Spatialities | Jacques Lévy |
Difference | Katharyne Mitchell |
More-than-Human Geographies | Beth Greenough |
Society-Nature | Andrea Nightingale |
Transformations | Dan Clayton |
Critique | Alastair Bonnett |
Geo-historiographies | Trevor Barnes |
PART TWO: PRACTISING HUMAN GEOGRAPHIES | |
Capturing (GIS) | Matt Wilson and Sarah Elwood |
Noticing | Eric Laurier |
Representing | Anna Barford |
Writing (somewhere) | Juliet Fall |
Researching | Meghan Cope |
Producing | Mia Gray |
Engaging | Jane Wills |
Educating | Avril Maddrell and Jenny Hill |
Advocacy | Audrey Kobayashi |
VOLUME 2 | |
PART THREE: LIVING HUMAN GEOGRAPHIES | |
Ethics | Elizabeth Olson |
Economy | Marianna Pavlovskaya and Kevin St Martin |
Society | Jamie Winders |
Culture | Patricia Price |
Politics | David Featherstone |
Words | Christopher Philo and Cheryl McGeachan |
Power | Louise Amoore |
Development | Kate Wills |
Bodies | Rachel Silvey and Jean-Francois Bissonnette |
Identities | Robyn Dowling and Katherine McKinnon |
Demographies | Elspeth Graham |
Health | Matt Sparke |
Resistance | Sarah Wright |
PART FOUR: | |
ONLINE VIDEO CONVERSATIONS | |
Why Human Geography?: an editorial conversation | Roger Lee, Noel Castree, Sarah Elwood, Rob Kitchin and Susan Roberts |
Geography and geographical thought | David Livingstone and Doreen Massey |
Nature and Society | Susan Owens and Sarah Whatmore |
Geography and geographical practice | Katherine Gibson and Susan J Smith |
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Handbook of Human Geography published
I've had an email from the publisher, Sage, to say that the Handbook of Human Geography, for which I'm a co-editor, has been published. It's a bit of a tome, consisting of two volumes and stretching to 840 pages set out in double column, and has a couple of accompanying video conversations. It's also not cheap at £295, which definitely cries out 'library purchase'. The nice thing about the project was the publisher allowed us to adopt a fairly unconventional format that didn't shoehorn the chapters into a rigid domain-based structure, but allowed the authors to explore concepts and practices operating across the discipline. The result is some innovative and engaging content, rather than very dry encyclopedia style entries. There's also a really great line up of authors.
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