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 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%