
Direction and Socio-spatial Theory
Description
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Many accounts of the social world are incomplete, or are increasingly out of step with recent developments of neoliberal capitalism. Not least through new technological mediations of production and consumption, the much-discussed waning of the importance of physical distance has been matched by the increasing centrality of turning from one thing to another as a basic way in which lives are structured and occupied. A sensibility for embodied processes of turning, and for phenomena of direction more generally, is urgently needed. Chapters develop wide-ranging and original engagements with the arguments of Sara Ahmed, Jonathan Beller, Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Virginia Held, Bernard Stiegler, Theodore Schatzki, Rahel Jaeggi, Hartmut Rosa and David Harvey.
This book reinterprets practice, embodiment, alienation, reification, social reproduction and ethical responsibility from a directional perspective. It will be a new valuable resource and reference for political and social geography students, as well as sociologists and anthropologists.
Reviews / Votes
"It has been a very long time since I have read a book as lucidly argued and learned as this one. Starting with the basic fact of human finitude and the simple notion that a human being can attend to only so much at once, Matthew Hannah proceeds step by step to reinvigorate and rework social-spatial theory -- an enterprise that has somehow underplayed what human attention implies for human being and becoming more generally. Hannah has an abiding concern with the irreducible embodiment of human being and he carefully shows what is at stake when contemporary capitalism places our embodiment under increasing strain. Hannah's intelligence is truly rare and the clarity with which he reveals it is even rarer. He is comfortable navigating a stunning range of scholarship, also seeming never to lose his way nor his purpose in underscoring the ethical dimensions of this project. This is a book for all geographers, all spatial thinkers and practitioners, indeed for anyone who is philosophically, ethically, and critically inclined. Direction and Social-spatial Theory is a terrific and marvelous achievement." George Henderson, Professor of Geography, University of Minnesota, USAMore details
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Content
Part I: Foundations
1. Political economies of attention
2. Toward a political phenomenology of attention
3. The directedness of practice
Part II: Turning-in-the-world
4. Turning subject
5. Turning-as-relation: direction, alienation and montage
6. Turning and reification
Part III: Direction, socio-spatial theory and ethics
7. Occupation and directed practice: outline of a political economy
8. Visualizing directed social practice
Conclusion: ethics and directional responsibility
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