|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David Featherstone (Liverpool University)Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell Dimensions: Width: 15.30cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.354kg ISBN: 9781405158091ISBN 10: 1405158093 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 12 September 2008 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsSeries Editors’ Preface viii Acknowledgements ix Introduction: Space, Contestation and the Political 1 Part I Networking the Political 13 1 Place and the Relational Construction of Political Identities 15 2 Geographies of Solidarities and Antagonisms 36 Part II Geographies of Connection and Contestation 57 3 Labourers’ Politics and Mercantile Networks 59 4 Making Democratic Spatial Practices 79 5 Counter-Global Networks and the Making of Subaltern Nationalisms 99 Part III Political Geographies of the Counter-Globalization Movement 119 6 Geographies of Power and the Counter-Globalization Movement 121 7 Constructing Transnational Political Networks 149 Conclusion: Towards Politicized Geographies of Connection 177 Notes 190 References 196 Index 221ReviewsThis persuasive, important, and well-written book rethinks resistance to dominant forms of globalization by emphasizing the translocal, often transnational, character of subaltern protest ... Featherstone has produced a book as dexterous, creative, and wide-ranging as the political network it seeks to describe. (Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 2010) This is a book that demands the attention and engagement of geographers, and others ?inside' and ?outside' academia, working on the intersections between social movements, political identities and the neoliberal state, ultimately offering a productive and uniquely positive approach to understanding and acting on the issues raised by such concerns. (Area, February 2011) Featherstone has produced a book as dexterous, creative, and wide-ranging as the political networks it seeks to describe. (Progress in Human Geography and Environment and Planning D, February 2011) This reviewer thinks we should be rather more generous - for, whatever the political objectives, we should be hugely grateful for Featherstone's rescuing of the past relational geographies of resistance. (Progress in Human Progress in Human Progress, February 2011) In summary, RSPI is an incisive and stimulating work that significantly enhances our understanding of the construction and operation of counter-globalization networks. It extends and develops relational accounts of political identities and space in important ways, contributing to debates in political theory, human geography and social movement. (Social Movement Studies, 22 October 2010) Featherstone's book contributes to our understanding of the formation of counter-global networks. He shows that transnational networks are not void of place. ... This book provides a good starting point for scholars who seek an understanding what happens to networks when subaltern relationships are spread across the globe. (Mobilization, March 2010) This optimistic take on the role of political contestation in world-making processes is a welcome change from the gloom and doom so typical of other geographical texts. (Environment and Planning A, 2009) In summary, RSPI is an incisive and stimulating work that significantly enhances our understanding of the construction and operation of counter-globalization networks. It extends and develops relational accounts of political identities and space in important ways, contributing to debates in political theory, human geography and social movement. (Social Movement Studies, 22 October 2010) Featherstone's book contributes to our understanding of the formation of counter-global networks. He shows that transnational networks are not void of place. ... This book provides a good starting point for scholars who seek an understanding what happens to networks when subaltern relationships are spread across the globe. (Mobilization, March 2010) This optimistic take on the role of political contestation in world-making processes is a welcome change from the gloom and doom so typical of other geographical texts. (Environment and Planning A, 2009) 'This book powerfully engages with contemporary relational understandings of space by drawing upon, critiquing and developing a rich theoretical palette. This together with the use of evocative ethnographic material serves to provide a convincing account of how political identities are created, reworked and deployed in networked practices of resistance. The book makes a significant contribution to the theorizing and explaining of political identities and practices forged through the articulation of resistance in empirically varied contexts.' Paul Routledge, University of Glasgow 'Featherstone's focus on the extra-local ties underpinning situated subaltern struggle offers a salutary alternative to conventional accounts of place-based resistance. His book's overall argument is as generative as it is critical for remapping global grievances and the interlinked insurgencies they inspire.' Matthew Sparke, University of Washington, Seattle Author InformationDavid Featherstone is a lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Liverpool. He has key research interests in space, politics and resistance and has published papers in several journals, including Society and Space, Antipode and Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |