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Scott Kirsch

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Publications -  31
Citations -  918

Scott Kirsch is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Empire & Cultural geography. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 29 publications receiving 867 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott Kirsch include Royal Holloway, University of London & University of Colorado Boulder.

Papers
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Cultural geography I: Materialist turns

TL;DR: The authors suggest that overlapping strains of materialism are already providing cultural geography with some of its "connective wiring" and core concerns, which highlights the transformative work of meaning-making cultural processes in the world.
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The Nature of Things: Dead Labor, Nonhuman Actors, and the Persistence of Marxism

TL;DR: In this paper, the question of social agency in the animation of things, and how this problematic has been conceptualized in Marxist and Actor-Network Theory (ANT) approaches to human-nature-technology relations is discussed.
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The Incredible Shrinking World? Technology and the Production of Space:

TL;DR: In this article, the role of technology in the transformation of space and the ways in which these changes are represented are explored principally through critical analysis of the work of Harvey and Lefebvre; more specifically, the place of technology as expressed through their varied emphases on the annihilation of space, and the production of space.
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John Wesley Powell and the Mapping of the Colorado Plateau, 1869 –1879: Survey Science, Geographical Solutions, and the Economy of Environmental Values

TL;DR: The authors examines the historical geographical processes through which Powell's maps of an unexplored region gave way to his maps of proper land use, epitomized by his 1878 Report on the Lands of the Arid Region of the United States, which is still conventionally recognized as a foundational piece in American environmental thought.
Book

Proving Grounds: Project Plowshare and the Unrealized Dream of Nuclear Earthmoving

Scott Kirsch
TL;DR: Kirsch also argues that the lessons learned from this case continue to hold relevance today by exploring key issues of science and risk, Proving Grounds warns that knowledge production and environmental politics are still very much intimately, and dangerously, related.