I remember this when Bill Koelch was teaching us geographic thought at Clark
in the 1980s.
I may still have the legendary reading list (30-40 references per week of
seminar; one Japanese student once mistakenly thought you had to read them
ALL each week!), but Courtice Rose (Bishops University, Canada) or David
Lowenthal (UCL) may have the reference to hand.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: George L Henderson [SMTP:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Friday, 28 January 2000 00:34
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: query
>
>
> Does anyone recall a piece of writing published in the late 1970s or early
> 1980s, asserting that geography had no privileged position in the
> social sciences when it comes to radical social theory? This may sound
> like any one of a number of writings and it's probably no further help
> that it appeared in an edited volume devoted to geographic thought, of
> which there were of course many at the time.
>
> Alas, I made no note of this book three years ago when I first picked it
> up, and it's nowhere to be found on my university library's shelves.
>
> I'm wanting to take a look at this piece again, as it strikes a very
> strong counternote to the 'society and space' axioms that have since
> become dear to 'critical human geography,' pardon the expression.
>
> Thanks to anyone with a clue,
>
> George Henderson
> Dept. of Geography
> University of Arizona
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
|