Journal ArticleDOI
Emotions and affect in recent human geography
TLDR
The authors identify three key areas of agreement: a relational ontology that privileges fluidity; a privileging of proximity and intimacy in their accounts; and a favouring of ethnographic methods.Abstract:
This paper seeks to examine both how emotions have been explored in emotional geography and also how affect has been understood in affectual geography. By tracing out the conceptual influences underlying emotional and affectual geography, I seek to understand both the similarities and differences between their approaches. I identify three key areas of agreement: a relational ontology that privileges fluidity; a privileging of proximity and intimacy in their accounts; and a favouring of ethnographic methods. Even so, there is a fundamental disagreement, concerning the relationship – or non-relationship – between emotions and affect. Yet, this split raises awkward questions for both approaches, about how emotions and affect are to be understood and also about their geographies. As importantly, mapping the agreements and disagreements within emotional and affectual geography helps with an exploration of the political implications of this work. I draw upon psychoanalytic geography to suggest ways of addressing certain snags in both emotional and affectual geography.read more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
When research animals become pets and pets become research animals: care, death, and animal classification
Journal ArticleDOI
Contesting place names: the east sea/sea of japan naming issue
John Rennie Short,Leah Dubots +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an example of the active contestation of a place name in Korea, based on the work of critical toponymy, and present a method to solve the problem.
Book ChapterDOI
Affective Geovisualization and Children: Representing the Embodied and Emotional Geographies of Children
Book ChapterDOI
The Concrete Richness of the Sensible
TL;DR: Deleuze's "transcendental empiricism" as discussed by the authors can be seen as a means of reorienting the study of life, meaning and experience across the health and social sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mapping the Skin and the Guts of Stories – A Dialogue between Geolocated and Dislocated Cartographies
Élise Olmedo,Sébastien Caquard +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors propose a dialogue between geolocated and dislocated cartographies, between Euclidean and coordinate-free maps, and between conventional and alternative mapping practices.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Intensities of feeling: towards a spatial politics of affect
TL;DR: In this article, the authors take the politics of affect as not just incidental but central to the life of cities, given that cities are thought of as inhuman or transhuman entities and that politics is understood as a process of community without unity.
Journal ArticleDOI
A single day's walking: narrating self and landscape on the South West Coast Path
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a single day's walking along the South West Coast Path in North Devon, England, focusing on the distinctive ways in which coast walking patterns into refracting orderings of subjectivity and spatiality, into sensations of anxiety and immensity, haptic enfolding and attenuation, encounters with others and with the elements.
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Becoming and Being Hopeful: Towards a Theory of Affect
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how hope takes place, in order to outline an explicit theory of the more-than-rational or less-than rational in the context of recent attunement to issues of the affectual and emotional in social and cultural geography.
Journal ArticleDOI
Embodying emotion sensing space: introducing emotional geographies
TL;DR: A welling-up of emotion within geography, a surge of interest reminiscent of the fascination and exploration of embodiment that characterized much social and cultural geographies, has been witnessed in recent years as mentioned in this paper.