Article
Space and spatiality in theory
Dialogues in Human Geography
2(1) 3–22
ª The Author(s) 2012
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DOI: 10.1177/2043820611434864
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Peter Merriman
Aberystwyth University, UK
Martin Jones
Aberystwyth University, UK
Gunnar Olsson
Uppsala University, Sweden
Eric Sheppard
University of Minnesota, USA
Nigel Thrift
University of Warwick, UK
Yi-Fu Tuan
University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Abstract
This article is an edited transcript of a panel discussion on ‘Space and Spatiality in Theory’ which was held at
the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Washington, DC, April 2010. In the
article, the panel map out some of the challenges for thinking, writing and performing spaces in the 21st
century, reflecting upon the emergence of new ways of theorizing space and spatiality, the relationship
between writing, action and spacing, and the emergence of distinctive spatialized ontologies (e.g. ‘movement-space’) which appear to reflect epistemological and technological shifts in how our worlds are
thought, produced and inhabited. The panellists stress the importance of recognizing the partial nature of
Anglophone theoretical approaches, and they argue for more situated and modest theories. They also
reflect upon the importance of a wide range of disciplinary knowledges and practices to their thinking on the
spatialities of the world, from philosophy and the natural sciences to art and poetry.
Keywords
history of geography, language, movement, poststructuralism, space
Introduction by Peter Merriman
and Martin Jones
Space and spatiality are often positioned at the heart
of the discipline and practice of geography, unifying
Corresponding author:
Peter Merriman, Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences,
Aberystwyth University, Llandinam Building, Penglais Campus,
Aberystwyth SY23 3DB, UK.
Email: prm@aber.ac.uk
4
a diverse and eclectic subject matter that
ranges from the patterning of economic and social
life to physical processes and ‘natural’ environments (Thrift, 2009a). Different understandings of
space and spatiality underpin some of the key epistemological chasms and ontological assumptions
separating philosophical approaches and practices
in geography, while these same traditions espouse
approaches to space that can be traced back to the
thinking of scholars such as Aristotle and Plato,
Bergson and Einstein, Euclid and Carnap, and perhaps most significantly Newton, Descartes, Leibniz
and Kant (see, for example, Casey, 1998; Jammer,
1969; Reichenbach, 1958).
In the past few decades it has become somewhat
conventional within Anglophone human geography
to claim that space and spatiality are social and cultural, as well as quasi-material, productions – claims
which were evident in the writings of Doreen
Massey, David Harvey, Manuel Castells and Henri
Lefebvre, and before them Émile Durkheim and
Georg Simmel. More recently, Massey, Thrift and
others have suggested that our focus must be on
‘time-space’ or ‘space-time’. Massey (2005), in particular, has outlined how space and time ‘are integral to one another’, ‘distinct’ but ‘co-implicated’,
and ‘it is on both of them, necessarily together,
that rests the liveliness of the world’ (pp. 47, 55,
56), and she has convincingly argued that relational
approaches to time-space can enable us to reconnect
the spatial with the political, as well as forming the
basis for dialogue between human and physical geographers (Massey, 2005). Along with Harvey and
Thrift, she has shown how processual, poststructuralist and non-representational approaches to the
flux and unfolding of social spaces and times moves
us well beyond Cartesian and Newtonian conceptions of space and time, but as such understandings
have spread throughout the discipline we might ask
whether more conventional conceptions of dimensioned, contained or delimited space and time have
actually receded. Indeed, one could argue that the
fusing of time and space as time-space and their a
priori positioning as concepts for understanding the
unfolding of situations and events may actually
reflect a prevailing western scientism which can
be traced back from contemporary geography,
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
philosophy and science through the work of
Bergson, Einstein, Newton, Descartes and Kant to
classical thinking (Merriman, 2012a, 2012b). Of
course, many geographers prefer to operationalize
seemingly more encultured and embodied concepts,
such as place, environment, landscape, region and
locale, in their studies than the seemingly more
abstract concept of space, but it is precisely the multiplicitous and heterogeneous nature of space and
spatiality – as abstract and concrete, produced and
producing, imagined and materialized, structured
and lived, relational, relative and absolute – which
lends the concept a powerful functionality that
appeals to many geographers and thinkers in the
social sciences and humanities.
The remainder of this article is an edited transcript of a panel discussion on ‘Space and Spatiality
in Theory’ which we organized at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers in
Washington, DC, in April 2010. Four panellists –
Gunnar Olsson, Eric Sheppard, Nigel Thrift and
Yi-Fu Tuan – reflect upon past and present attempts
to think and practise space and spatiality in geography, the humanities, social sciences and sciences.
We invited the panellists to address a series of
purposefully open questions about space and spacing and how they have been approached as absolute,
relative, relational, abstract, processual, morethan-representational, matter, structured and experienced. We asked the panellists to reflect upon the
history of geographical engagements with theories
of space and spatiality, and the directions that current debates may be heading in. We asked them to
reflect upon how geographers have engaged with
theories of space and spatiality developed in such
diverse disciplines as anthropology, economics,
philosophy, physics, literary studies, mathematics,
art, political theory and performance. We asked the
panellists to consider whether there has been, or
needs to be, a shift from grand theoretical treatises
on space and spatiality towards more modest and/
or contextual theories of life and world, and what
kinds of methods are or might be useful for apprehending the spatialities of the world.
The panellists’ contributions to theories of space
and spatiality over the past three to five decades are
widely known and, as is well documented in
Merriman et al.
accounts of their careers, they have engaged with,
and been pioneers of, a broad range of approaches
which embrace human and, at times, physical geography, quantitative and qualitative approaches,
regional science, critical GIS, geomorphology,
Marxism and neo-Marxism, humanism, structuration theory, time geography and poststructuralism;
reaching out to disciplines such as planning, anthropology, sociology, politics, economics, performance studies and critical theory. We encouraged
the panellists to reflect upon their own biographical
and theoretical trajectories in order to stress the
processual nature of their thinking and theorizing
on space and spatiality. Theoretical arguments and
perspectives on space have been and are constantly
shifting, and we do not believe that there are any
universal solutions to age-old problems or theoretical debates. The four panellists provide clearly
situated, positioned and (hopefully) modest contributions which, coupled with the audience questions,
should provoke readers to think space and spatiality
differently and multiply, opening up new lines of
investigation, experimentation and debate.
Gunnar Olsson
Alphabetical order is also an order, the letter O by
convention placed closer to the end than to the
beginning. But so strangely is the present panel
composed that for once my own name comes first.
Yet another performance on the high wire, yet
another attempt to understand the relations of time
and space, cause and effect.
And let it be said at the outset that whenever I
encounter these Kantian fundamentals of time and
space, cause and effect, then my mind automatically
swirls back to Augustine of Hippo, the one-timehooligan-turned-saint who in his search for eternity
once stopped and wondered: ‘What then is time?’
And then he replied: ‘If no one asks me, I know; if
I want to explain it to a questioner, I do not know’
(1944, Book XI, Chapter XIV: 217).
My own attitude to the concepts of space and
spatiality is quite similar, a feeling I share also with
Gilbert Ryle who in the preface to The Concept of
Mind remarked that ‘many people can talk sense
with concepts but cannot talk sense about them.
5
They are’, as he put it, ‘like people who know their
way about their parish, but cannot construct or read
a map of it, much less a map of the region or continent in which their parish lies’ (Ryle, 1949: 7–8,
emphases added). Accordingly he made it his task
‘to rectify the logical geography of the knowledge
we already possess’. Sounds like Ptolemy to me, the
cartographer who spent a lifetime constructing a net
in which he could capture the world.
But wait! What is a concept, what is a net, what
is the mind itself? As so often, the answers lie in
the words themselves, the OED a treasure trove for
anyone interested in the logical geography of the
knowledge we already possess.
First, the concept – a disposition, a frame of
mind; its Latin roots in the two words con and
capere, literally ‘grasping together’. Close your
eyes and you will see what a concept is: a reaching
out with the hand, a way of dealing with the most
abstract ideas as if they were a collection of things.
It is hard to find a more revealing example of how
the flesh turns to word and comes to dwell among
us. ‘Gripping’ is the name of the conceptual game.
Then, the net – a weaving together of warp and
weft; a world-wide-web which in the same texture
forms what it captures and captures what it forms;
a thesaurus sapientiae of well-ordered boxes. But
a net is also a matrix, by definition ‘a rectangular
arrangement of quantities or symbols’, the algebraic
map that lay at the heart of Walter Isard’s Regional
Science, the very womb of my own brand of geography, the mould in which everything was cast
and shaped.
Next, the mind – sometimes a noun and
sometimes a verb, but always somehow related to
memory; the action-space of imagination, that particularly human faculty through which we can make
the absent present and bring the unconscious into
the open. But memory, like so much else, has a tendency to be doubly anchored, one hook sunk into
the sensible, the other into the intelligible. To
exemplify, there is a profound difference between
remembering the members dismembered, on the
one hand, and being reminded of whatever you
might or might not have forgotten, on the other.
And with that remark about the intertwining of
epistemology and ontology I have finally come to
6
where I set out to come: to Plato’s chora, the pivotal
concept of Timaeus, that most difficult and most
influential of all his dialogues. It was in this late
work that he finally understood that the logical geography which had guided him so well in the past was
really not good enough, that the invisible maps he
had constructed in the Republic had been too simplistic. To be more precise, he now realized that the
world consists not of two modes of being, but of
three; not merely the intelligible, which I can grasp
with my thoughts, and the sensible, that I meet with
my body, but a third genus as well.
It is his third genus that Plato called chora, a term
which nowadays is often translated as ‘space’ or
‘place’. In his own words, however, it is ‘a concept
difficult of explanation and dimly seen . . . , the
receptacle, and in a manner the nurse, of all generation . . . , an invisible and formless being which
receives all things and in some mysterious way partakes of the intelligible, and is most incomprehensible’ (Plato, 1961: 49a (1176) and 51b (1178)). Little
wonder that later generations have gotten lost, for
as Jacques Derrida once put it: ‘Who are you chora,
where do I find you, where is your place, what is
your unnamable name?’ (Derrida, 1995: 111).
Rephrased into my own vocabulary: how do I grasp
the formless that refuses to be categorized, how do I
comprehend the incomprehensible?
Not so easy to say, especially as these questions
are important enough to be protected by the taboo, a
concept which is etymologically connected not
merely with the terms ‘under prohibition’ and ‘not
allowed’, but with the words ‘sacred’ and ‘holy’
as well. What is taboo is consequently doubly tied,
first to the forbidden itself, then to the strongest
form of the taken-for-granted, that is to those
aspects of the unconscious which are crucial enough
to be blessed by the gods themselves, by definition
beyond reach. How could I possibly resist the temptation of pursuing these issues of understanding how
I understand, how could I ever stop wondering what
it means to be human?
Driven by that desire I now find myself at
the very core of the most forbidden of everything
forbidden; in the bottomless chasm between the
five senses of the body and the sixth sense of culture; in the abysmal land of liminality which the
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
well-behaved must never enter. This is indeed the
realm of the chora, the void that took Plato a lifetime to locate and Aristotle a sea battle to name: the
excluded middle – a most appropriate term for the
fix-point of logical geography, the non-bridgeable
gap which in the same figure unites and separates,
liberates and imprisons; the no man’s land of wired
trenches and exploding mines.
But why would the excluded middle be
excluded? Because it is there – and nowhere else –
that POWER resides, there that the dictators of
self-reference are free to do whatever they fancy,
by nature predictably unpredictable; ‘I am who I
am and I do what I do’, like YHWH himself a tautology, by definition always true but never informative. Trespassing into that well-guarded territory is
obviously not for you and me and that is why the
second commandment with its double prohibition
against images and improper naming amounts to
nothing less than an all-embracing censorship paragraph. In that light it is easy to see why even the
most innocuous map risks taking its holder to
Siberia, for every map is essentially an interweaving
of picture and story. Perhaps the real issue is
whether it is at all possible to have a metaphor that
is not at bottom spatial.
So where have these analyses led me? To the
Kantian limits of space, time, and causality; to the
womb of creativity, the formless receptacle that our
concepts have been designed not to grasp, our nets
not to net, our minds not to mind. It is in this sanctuary that I find not only the princes, for whose education Plato set up his Academy, but also the poets,
whom he did his utmost to keep out. Among the latter I would certainly include Stéphane Mallarmé, he
who finished his Un Coup de De´s with the conclusion that ‘nothing has taken place except the place
. . . except perhaps a constellation’ (1994: 142 and
144). It is this constellation that I now name ‘the
Great Cartographer’, an octagon formed by the
bright stars of Paul Cézanne and Marcel Duchamp,
James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, Michel Serres and
Franco Farinelli, Kurt Gödel and Paul Cohen.
Were it not for his bad habit of solving problems
by defining them away, Alain Badiou might have
been there as well. And yet the truth remains that
among contemporary thinkers he is the only one to
Merriman et al.
seriously approach the void as a multitude, the only
one who knows where the dice are thrown, the
unnamable named, the formless conceived. Easy
to share his taste for Mallarmé and Pesoa, impossible to excuse his Maoism.
Strange adventure this descendence into the categorical abyss, in retrospect an experience so rich
that I might never wish to ascend from it again (a
story more fully told in Olsson, 2007). The challenge is enormous, for as I have preached so many
times before, the point is to minimize mistranslation
by thinking-and-acting in such a way that what I
am writing about is one with the language I am writing in. And once that challenge has been accepted, it
seems quite clear that self-reference is the ultimate
mode of spatial analysis, a power-filled game of
autocorrelation played with loaded dice. And just
as every croupier knows that in the long run the bank
always wins, so every fisherman, every accountant,
every categorizer knows that the net (in whatever
guise it might appear) is what remains after all
expenses have been paid.
All of it easier said than done, all of it easier done
than understood. And that is why the theme of the
present panel is so maddeningly exciting.
Eric Sheppard
I have titled these reflections ‘Confessions of a
Recovering Spatial Fetishist’, because my exposure
to geography and space began with the evangelical
spatial science revolution, which I had to work
through as a kind of aporia alongside Gunnar and
many others, coming out of the other side to try to
make sense of what space means in geography.
Another way of describing this is as my trajectory
from space to spatialities. At the centre of my thinking – and this is the ‘recovering’ part, as you never
quite get past it – has been the question of what it
means to take seriously the spatial dimensions,
aspects and modalities of socio-environmental
processes. How does this affect the ways in which
we think?
My particular engagement with this, from which
my current thinking has emerged, has been triggered
by my work in economic geography; a field where
space and geography also have enthusiastically been
7
taken up by a discipline outside our own over the
last 20 years (Economics). In this case, geography
has been taken up by even the most autistic of social
science disciplines as a factor that matters, but in a
particular way – as an exogenously given flat world,
the uniform plane of August Lösch (1954 [1940]).
The challenge, also Lösch’s challenge, has been
how to create uneven economic topographies upon
that uniform surface by dint of the cost of transportation. This was, and is, ‘spatial science’ redux, and
it had radical implications within the very narrow
canon that dominates Economics. ‘There’s not just
one equilibrium; but more than one’, was the first
surprise that space added to the neoclassical
pantheon, and a series of others have followed, with
very powerful public consequences. For example,
the 2009 World Development Report is basically a
Krugmanesque account of how the ‘development
problems’ of the Third World can be ameliorated
by connecting it better to the rest of the world
through the flattening of space (World Bank, 2008).
Taking the spatiality of the economy seriously –
which is not done in an economics literature that
takes it to be an exogenous variable – generates a
very different optic. In this view, territorial economies are produced with their distinctive features as
particular kinds of places; also, the very connectivity of the world is produced, changing distance, connectivity and spatiality through the modification
of transportation/communications technologies.
When you follow this path, as I have over the past
30 years, you find that it challenges most of the
core parables of neoclassical economic theory:
parables of equilibrium and harmony, of microfoundations, of the social benefits of capitalism
and the market, of comparative advantage, of the
highest and best use of land, and many others. But
it also undermines some hoary nostrums of Marxian political economy, including those about value
and class (Sheppard, 2004).
In short, taking seriously the constructed nature
of spatiality as shaped through economic processes
forces you to reconsider core economic principles in
many of the aspatial paradigms that still accompany
the word ‘economics’ in its various manifestations.
So the lesson, here, is that spatiality can disrupt theories that have not taken it seriously. However,
8
although the economic geography story reminds
us of this, what is crucial is which theorizations of
spatiality are imported into a set of discussions, and
to what effect. Turning to the debates we have had
around this in geography, particularly over the last
15 years, we have seen a sequence of central concepts come and go. In the days of Bill Bunge
(1962) it was space and distance, but another concern was place and territoriality, which emerged in
the work of Yi-Fu Tuan (1974) and returned in the
late 1980s and early 1990s across the discipline.
Then came extensive theorizations of the construction of scale (Delaney and Leitner, 1997), followed shortly thereafter by networks, relational
approaches, connectivity, and such mind-blowing
concepts as non-proximal propinquity (Jones, 2009).
Borders, frontiers and boundaries have been a theme,
as have hybrid spaces, mobility, and flat ontologies
and the event.
In short, there has been a whirlwind tour of one
concept replacing another, in a way that has been
quite unproductive, particularly because it has often
been done on an ontological register suggesting a
lack of space for common ground: looking for that
master ontology, if you will. ‘My ontology versus
yours’, such were the debates over flat ontology and
scale. There also has been an attempt to get beyond
this by selecting out several ‘master concepts’ to use
as the prime conceptual grid into which everything
else can be fitted: the TPSN framework (Territories,
Places, Scales, Networks) that Bob Jessop and
Martin Jones have described (see Jessop et al.,
2008; Jones and Jessop, 2010).
In the final analysis, I would argue, these lists,
prioritizations attempting to find the concepts that
matter most, are always incomplete and never really
get us to where we need to go. Worse, they are reflective of the perspectives, the situated knowledge, out
of which these concepts have been developed; those
of an Anglophone, arguably masculine and mostly
white geography, as represented in today’s panel.
Yet, of course, there are other concepts circulating out there: the paradoxical spaces of Gillian Rose
(1993); the antipodean spatialities that Phil O’Neill
and Pauline McGuirk (2007) have written about;
postcolonial spatialities such as the partition spaces
of Oren Yiftachel (2003) and Sanjay Chaturvedi
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
(2005); various kinds of indigenous spatialities;
phase space; fractal spaces; and my own experiments
with sociospatial positionality (Sheppard, 2006). One
could go on and on, but that is not the point. Building
lists does not really get us very far.
As we look forward, I want to suggest four things:
First, if we are going to make an ontological
claim at all I think it should be relatively modest, not
deeply philosophical. It is that complex emerging
spatialities, or spatiotemporalities, matter. And they
matter because even though they are in part
constructed by us through a series of socionatural
processes in which humans participate, they nevertheless always already exist, always coming back
to shape what happens. This is what Ed Soja
(1980) has referred to in another context as a
‘socio-spatial dialectic’. They matter in multiple
ways. They matter materially. They matter in terms
of discourses and representations that are mobilized
around various spatial concepts. They matter
through the ways in which space is performed. And,
critically, they matter in terms of the everyday constructions of space that happen in the real world, as
social movements, neighbourhood organizations
and other groups make the spaces that we academics
try to think. Again, it is not a question of either/or:
we have to be thinking about spatialities in all of
these dimensions at once.
Second, returning to the various spatialities
which can be mobilized, including all those which
I have not listed or which have not yet been formulated or suggested, again it is not about a list but
rather should be a dialectical, process-based, relational way of approaching these concepts – not as
monisms, to be debated, cast aside or prioritized, but
as relationally constituted concepts. This is an
ongoing, complex, geographical process of knowledge production through which certain patterns of
concepts may precipitate out for a time, as what one
might want to call ‘permanences’ (with big scare
quotes around the word). Yet they are always in
flux, at risk of dissipation, and the debate always
goes on. We must attend to the constitutive processes through which these emerge, also expanding
those processes by diversifying the sociospatial
situatedness of the knowledge producers able to participate in this conceptual mapping.
Merriman et al.
Third, we need to take a lesson from Einstein and
many others and remember that it is not about space
or spatiality; it is always about spatiotemporality.
Our debates in geography too often set time aside
or position it as an orthogonal Newtonian third
dimension. This essentially freezes our ways of
thinking about the world, putting us in danger of
following economists’ obsessions with equilibrium
and pattern rather than with change. Therefore, we
need to attend to history, to the irreversibly emergent
nature of space-time as these complex systems coevolve. I would argue that incorporating time adequately into how we think about spatiality remains
a major challenge for geographical theorists.
Finally, in terms of methodological issues, I want
to strongly urge that we move away from methodological and spatiotheoretical predispositions which
have tended not only to separate out different kinds
of ways of thinking about space, but also to associate
them with particular kinds of methodologies. As I
have argued elsewhere, this creates caricatures that
are counterproductive (Sheppard, 2001, 2005). Consider, for example, how mathematical formulations
of the world can be constructed in ways that have all
kinds of dialectical and even Deleuzian properties to
them. Folding space is not just something which
happens in Marcus Doel’s (1999) Poststructuralist
Geographies, or in Deleuze, but happens just as much
in the mathematics of complexity theory (DeLanda,
2006; Sheppard, 2008). Alternatively, consider how
GIS – a technology that, of any that you can think
of in geography, is based on Boolean logics that social
theorists can be quick to criticize – has shown a
remarkable flexibility in connecting with other kinds
of spatial logics and spatial representations, creating
qualitative, feminist and ethnographic GIS, etc. (Cope
and Elwood, 2009; Kwan, 2002; Schuurman, 2002).
Spatialities are always open, up for grabs. Any
time we try to create boundaries between this spatial
concept and that, or this methodological approach
and that, we are short-changing our ability to try
to make sense of this whole mess.
Nigel Thrift
The organizers of this session sent us a formidable
list of questions we might answer concerning space,
9
not just on matters vegetable, animal and mineral,
but also metaphysical, logical, categorical, even
biographical – I feel there is a moment of Gilbert
and Sullivan in there, if I could only get to it. I
thought what I would do is just answer one kind of
quasi-biographical question, hoping that I could
touch on some of the others that were asked as I
wend along my merry way.
I suppose the best way I could summarize why I
became interested in space in the way that I did was
that I was interested in enunciating a kind of
dynamic notion of space; one in which it is possible
to subscribe to a sense of space as fields of differential movement. And I started out with an interest in
how space and time interlocked, which led me naturally into fields like ‘time geography’ and even
methods like multidimensional scaling (Thrift,
1977a, 1977b). I then proceeded, in a somewhat
naive way, it has to be said, to try to link these kinds
of areas to what I thought of at the time as larger
forces, like capitalism, helped by the thoughts of, for
example, Marx on time and space (Thrift, 1983).
Then I suppose I moved on to a more general
emphasis on movement, one which framed being
as a never-ending production of spaces and times
(Thrift, 1996, 2008). That is why I do not think there
could ever be a single ontology.
Like all writers, I had to spend a lot of time excavating the forerunners of my own thoughts. You
find, normally, that every thought you have that you
think is original has already been thought 100 times
by someone beforehand. And that is, of course, a
never-ending process of rediscovery. I also encountered, luckily, a whole series of what one might call
orphan thinkers of various stripes – whom I kind of
tripped across by accident – who enliven this whole
process. I am very taken at the moment, for example, with the work of a German writer called Heiner
Muhlmann, who writes things that are truly crazy
and extremely interesting, both at the same time (see
Muhlmann, 2005). Finally, I was able to make that
journey in the company of other much more inspired
contemporaries who taught me an awful lot, even
when I disagreed with them, and many of them are
here today.
At the same time, of course, while all this intellectual rambling was going on, the world was
10
changing. In particular, the kinds of technologies
that we used in everyday life made it increasingly
possible to track and trace movement and to frame
the world as movement. The kinds of things that
Torsten Hägerstrand wanted to do – such as producing a kind of dynamic census of, I suspect, just about
everything, changing moment by moment – are
becoming a kind of reality, bit by bit. In turn, and
not coincidentally, we are entering a kind of diagrammatic world that reflects back on itself in all
sorts of rather interesting ways. For example, just
look at contemporary continental philosophy that
is intent on etching the shape or the outline of
thought through various kinds of spatialization.
And I do not think it is a coincidence that that is
happening at this particular time.
Again, and at the same time, across academia
then more generally, people became interested in
space. I was never exactly sure why this happened
and I am still not. And the reason for that is simply
because the impulse sprang from a whole series of
inexact motives of one form or another. Look, for
example, at postcolonial writers refiguring historical memory. Look at philosophers trying to produce
new takes on immanence. Look at the reworking of
the political, which connects the social and the
somatic in political theory. Look at rewriting the
landscape in literary works or even acting as the fuel
of the current interest in matters material, whether
that be in the form of objects or new forms of media.
Whatever the reason for this spatial impulse, in
large parts of social science and humanities it has
not only produced new takes on the empirical – and,
by God, we need those because, frankly, social
scientists will become a dying breed, I suspect,
unless they can start generating new ways of doing
empirical work – but it has also forced theory to take
on board what one might call a kind of second naturalism, as well as pointing to the resonances from
forces that we cannot explicate but we know are
there because we can feel them in various ways. In
part, then, this spatial impulse was simply another
fad. In part it was something with genuine grip. I
suspect it was always thus.
So where are we now? I have only a few clues.
We are in the middle of it. How can we possibly
know, in any strong sense? Instead of trying to claim
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
that the whole lot of everything can or should be
explained, what I should like to think is that what
the emphasis on space might have shown is how
little we can often explain and how often we can
stifle as well as enliven. Contexts have their own
dynamics and what comes out of them is often
unpredictable, excessive, and certainly is only partly
open to what we call theory. The world, in certain
senses, is continually a kind of experiment and the
best we can often do is harvest the situation to our
advantage. I suppose one of the concerns I have is
that what we might loosely – and I do mean loosely –
call ‘the Left’ has undersold a lot of the time this
skill of reading propensity and with it the possibility
of conducting a much more widespread politics of,
if you like, ‘sign’, or should it be ‘signal’ and ‘sight’
intertwined? In particular, I think, ‘the Left’ tends to
underestimate the process of doing as a moment in
its own right and not just as a way station to a secure
goal that has already been legislated.
I could go on, but let me turn instead in the last
part of this talklet to my sense of what I think is happening in the world at present. I think one should, in
a sense, put one’s money where one’s mouth is, so I
will do that. Roughly speaking, I think the world is
being refashioned so that what one might very generally call ‘media techniques’ – for example, drawn
from practices like film but certainly not just from
the practices of film – are becoming ‘for real’,
etched into the fabric of spaces in such a way that the
atmosphere of these spaces can be reliably reproduced, like the frames of film. Save, of course, that
the frames bleed into each other, and that they are
not really frames, but more technologies that allow
the shorthand of the glance to be actualized by providing just enough prompts and props to allow detail
to be inferred rather than provided.
That process of what we might call diagrammatology, using words, images, numbers, is happening
because new kinds of three-dimensional writing
which incorporate all kinds of ways of signing and
sensing the world are coming into existence. These
allow spaces to be explicated in ways that were
heretofore unavailable. Spaces can, in a sense, be
represented in ways that would not have been the
case in the past. And such writing operates in the
domain of affect, but as a domain that is calculated,
Merriman et al.
thereby bringing feeling and calculation together in
the classic Deleuzian way, rather than holding them
apart as is often conventional. Such writing is not
abstracted from a mode of life. Indeed, in certain
senses it is a mode of life.
In my recent work, what I have tried to describe
is the current ambition of one agency out of many to
actually do this. I have called that agency – and
one puts a few chips, I suppose, on the table at this
point – the ‘security-entertainment complex’ (Thrift,
2011, after Sterling, 2009). You can call it a complex,
you can call it what you like, but I am sure it is complex! The phrase is in contradistinction to the
military-industrial complex since I think it marks the
passing of a particular way of proceeding. And what
this new agency is trying to do is to remake the world
in its image by producing, through this continual generation of frames, what I call ‘Life World Inc’ – by
which I mean a machine that is there for massproducing different phenomenologies frame by
frame using this kind of three-dimensional writing.
Now, one of the reasons I have fixed on this
agency is because I think it is relatively new. There
are other agencies in the world that are also extraordinarily important in all sorts of ways, but I do
not think they are that new. Finance is a good
example – when you look at the current crisis, you
think, ‘My God, we’ve seen this over and over
again’. And, indeed, many people now argue that
finance is probably best likened to a kind of smokestack industry with a large number of pollutants
associated with it.
Anyway, the kinds of possibilities I am trying to
describe could never have unfolded unless the spatial template of the world could be changed and a
new kind of space, I think, is gradually being rolled
out across the world. It has taken a long time to produce. But I think it is extremely interesting. And, in
a sense, what it consists of is two epistemological
shifts that have transmuted into ontological ones.
In the first pass, the Euclidean model of numbered and angled space produced a grid over the
world. That process, of course, took hundreds and
hundreds of years to actually come to pass, and it
only really finally stopped with the advent of global
positioning systems. The second pass overlapped
and it began with the introduction of new forms of
11
information technology that produced a generalized
capacity to trap movement that is likely to end with
the redefinition of the world of persons and objects
as constituent elements of a kind of mutually constitutive moving frame. This second pass is still in formation. Already I think we can see it is producing a
kind of world of ‘movement-space’, at least in those
places where the technology stretches (Thrift,
2004), a space in which movement is able to take
on a different form, no longer understood as a simple displacement in space, knowable only in terms
of the movement already taken, but arising instead
from the institution of what Erin Manning (2009:
187) calls a ‘resonant grid’ that can itself shift shape
and that is able to detect and work with the coming
into existence as well as that which already exists.
Once you can do that, once you can actualize that
kind of logic of propensity using that kind of moving
frame, then the continual production of worlds
becomes a possibility.
If I had to summarize the developments I want to
describe, I would draw on the work of Tim Ingold.
Ingold is an exceptionally interesting but, in the end,
absolutely rock solid traditional phenomenologist.
His work on ‘lines’ argues that we are beset by a
world in which Euclidean lines, which work from
point to point, have superseded an older and better
way of proceeding which might be understood, if
you like, as the wayfaring line, the kind of line
which can wander about and which, by inference,
is closer to the fabric of the world (Ingold, 2007).
But I would argue that the kind of world in which
this wandering wayfaring line held sway is now
being reconstructed but out of the fields of number,
out of the stuff of calculable coordinates. And, in
turn, this space is also, I think, producing new ways
of doing social science and of restarting the social.
People like Mike Savage and Roger Burrows in the
UK have argued that, unless we can do something
new, given the profusion of data that is likely to
become available, parts of social science will simply
become redundant (Savage and Burrows, 2007). If
you have got populations, a lot of the time, will you
necessarily need to do some of the things that we
currently see as business as usual?
But I think what is really interesting coming out
of this new kind of space is the possibilities it
12
produces for linking together the humanities and the
social sciences in various ways. Not here but elsewhere I have talked about the ways in which that
might be possible; for example, by reworking various kinds of phenomenological motives through
new ways of doing architecture; and by reworking
what we mean by mapping. It is hardly bringing
news to a conference of geographers that there has
been an absolute renaissance of mapping going on
over the last ten years or so, much of that driven
by an interaction between the social sciences and the
humanities (Goodchild, 2009). And that is starting, I
think, to produce genuinely new ways of thinking
about the world and new ways of actually doing the
politics of the world.
Yi-Fu Tuan
I hate to be the creature of my time, and particularly
of my age, but I am afraid this talk is going to review
both. In other words, although the speakers thus far
have addressed the present and the future, what I
have to say here cannot help but have a slightly
musty odour to it.
In 2005, I went back to China after an absence of
64 years. My Chinese was rusty and I dreaded having
to give talks on ‘Space and Place’ in Chinese. In the
end, as the better part of valour, I spoke in English. I
was to find later how stilted translations of ‘space’
and ‘place’ could sound in Chinese. None of them
quite fitted. The English words ‘space’ and ‘place’
turn out to include meanings that have no close parallel in Chinese, nor, I dare say, in other languages.
Words can gain or lose meaning with time. It just
happens that ‘space’ and ‘place’ have sponged up
an unusual variety. New ones, moreover, are being
added, as, for example, the colloquial ‘spaced-out’
and our own semi-technical ‘spatiality’.
Further complicating the meaning of ‘space and
place’ are such related binaries as ‘nature and culture’, ‘town and country’, ‘city and wilderness’, and
‘home and world’, all of which are in common use.
Over time, some of their meanings have been added
to those of ‘space and place’, enriching them. A similar process has very likely occurred in China. If so,
the Chinese words for ‘space’ and ‘place’, whatever
they are, can only have distanced themselves further
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
from the English ones. The reason is this. Chinese
binaries, whose meanings have been added to the
Chinese for ‘space and place’, differ themselves in
meanings from their English analogues. The words
chao ye (court and wilderness) are a case in point.
They appear to be analogous to ‘city and wilderness’, but this is misleading. The meaning of ye,
unlike that of ‘wildness’ or ‘wilderness’, is almost
wholly negative. To Chinese farmers, the nomads
who roamed the open spaces beyond the Great Wall
were uncouth barbarians and little else. In the western world, ancient Romans might well have thought
the same of the Germanic tribes, but in modern
times, following the West’s Romantic turn in the
18th century, a shift in attitude occurred such that
peoples beyond the civilized world were seen not
only as wild, but also as noble. With this shift, wilderness itself gained a more positive aura.
In attitude toward ‘space’ and ‘place’, contrast
between East and West was perhaps sharpest in the
19th and early 20th centuries. During this period, the
Chinese viewed space beyond the densely settled
farmlands as unappealing, even threatening, and
they moved into it only under duress. Americans,
by contrast, saw such open space in their country
as freedom and opportunity. Space that led outward
to where the land met the sky stood for hope. Prospect, for Americans, has the double meaning of view
and future. It is what they could see from their picture window. The traditional Chinese courtyard
house had no picture window. Rather than space
stretching to the horizon, the only broad expanse
of space was the sky above, and it stood not so much
for hope in this world as hope for Heaven’s benevolence in the next.
Now, you may wonder, why this excursus into
cultural geography? I offer it as my answer to a
question that the organizers of this session have
asked us panellists to address, namely, is a theory
of space and spatiality possible? My answer is that
I have my doubts, for space, to me, is a cultural and
experiential construct, the meaning of which can
vary widely from people to people, and from individual to individual. This fact – that space has an
unusual range of subtly differentiated meanings –
invites us to engage in taxonomy, comparison, and
the tracing of their evolutionary course rather than
Merriman et al.
seek the Grail of an all-encompassing theory. In
other words, space remains geography, not physics.
What about spatiality? I cannot say, for my
understanding of the term is too hazy. I do wonder,
however, this. If a promising theory is in the works
and has been so for some time, shouldn’t we have by
now a common vocabulary and a common set of
goals? We don’t, do we? We may actually have
moved apart, become islands unto ourselves, close
to one another only in that we share a common intellectual ancestry, or that, like today, we happen to be
seated on the same panel. Regrettable though this
state of isolation is from the standpoint of our desire
for commonality and universality, society at large
may rejoice in our differences, in the diversity of our
offerings, and in the fact that meetings of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) have,
increasingly, the rambunctious feel of a carnival.
Still, as intellectuals, we continue to yearn for a
language, a theoretical statement, that commands
the attention of many. While we wait for it to
emerge, I suggest that we look more closely at what
we already have, which is the power of insight to
come up with an idea, a relationship, that receives
nods of recognition – if not worldwide, then across
cultural barriers and personal limitations. Here are
two examples. The first is from Roland Barthes. In
a typical aperçu, he reminds us of how the sense
of closeness and distance is linked to personal
pronouns. ‘We’ implies closeness, ‘you’ a certain
distance, and the third person singular – ‘he’ or
‘she’ – a still greater distance (Barthes, 1977:
168–169). If in conversation we hear a man refer
to his friend as ‘he’ rather than as ‘Paul’, we will
know that their relationship has cooled. The second
example is from T.S. Eliot’s poetry. I am struck by
two lines. One is: ‘I have lain on the floor of the sea
and breathed with the breathing of the sea-anemone’.
The other is: ‘I have lain in the soil and criticised the
worm’ (Eliot, 1935: 65). In these two lines, deep intimacy with nature is first invoked, and then broken by
a single unexpected word – ‘criticise’. Hinted in them
is the fragility of human bonding, the fact that we can
so easily create distance – make space yawn – even
while we are in bed with the other.
Now, I believe that the audience in this room,
made up of geographers of different backgrounds
13
and generations, has no trouble understanding these
two examples of psychological distancing. Isn’t it
strange that this should be the case when few of us
fully grasp what our own theorists say about space
and spatiality, even though they speak in prose and
strive, as scholars of a scientific or philosophical
bent, for maximum clarity? Suppose one theorist
does come up with a theory or framework that grips
the imagination and commands the respect of many.
Can it be that its power lies not, as the theorist himself may believe, in its compelling logic, but rather
in its hidden metaphors – its poetry?
Questions
Najeeb Jan (University of Colorado, USA)
In your closing remarks you suggested that the
poetry within our concepts is often more compelling
than their formal or logical senses. The privileging
of the poetic over the technical element of thought
suggests the proximity between the concept of spatiality and the thought of ontology, which is to say
that at the limits of thought the concept of spatiality
cannot be inquired about in isolation from the concept of being. If that is the case then it becomes critical – in order to bring sense to spatiality – to think
more carefully about what we mean when we invoke
the term ontology. Could I ask the panellists to
speak a bit more concretely about their understanding of the meaning of the term ‘ontology’ and its
philosophical genealogy?
Gunnar Olsson. A very good question, a question
which in my mind has much to do with rhetoric, that
is with the ways in which we are anchoring our
statements in whatever we may be referring to. That
said, we clearly find it easier to share the world of
material things like tables and chairs than to agree
about social relations like hopes and fears. And this
is why Immanuel Kant devoted his entire life to
mapping the boundary between the phenomena that
exist and the noumena that subsist; theoretical philosopher in the issues he was thinking about, practicing geographer in the languages he was thinking
in. Yet not even he was sensitive enough to avoid all
the traps of misplaced concreteness, of treating the
14
invisible as if it were visible. But what else could
he have done, for he too conceived of human
thought-and-action as a game of ontological transformations, his geographic metaphors setting off
explosions of metonymic associations: ‘Let there
be, and there is.’
Towards that background let me briefly return to
the key question of my introductory comments: ‘Is
metaphor an inherently spatial concept?’ Once that
question has been posed, what is its relation to the
all-embracing censorship paragraph of the second
commandment; as the sovereign of sovereigns twice
decreed, ‘you shall not make for yourself an idol
[and] you shall not misuse the name of the LORD
your God’ (Exodus 20: 4 and 7; Deuteronomy 5: 8
and 10). Notice, though, that the punishment for
spatializing the abstract (that is for forming a sculpture or drawing a picture) is far greater than for temporizing the power-holder’s name (that is for telling
a story). Please also recall that every map is a merging together of picture and story, indicative and
imperative in the same breath. As William Blake
(1975: xviii) put it, ‘prisons are built with stones
of law, brothels with bricks of religion’.
Wise is therefore the ontologist to remember
Aristotle’s saying that rhetoric and dialectics are the
twin sisters of each other. And up-to-date is the dialectician who knows that all that is solid melts into air.
Nigel Thrift. The first thing, of course, is that there are
many different ways that you can define ontologies.
If I was doing it I would probably index the Humean
sense of the term, as inferences about the world’s
connections, natural organizations, perceptions of
experience and causation and of what therefore constitutes both existence and non-existence. So that
would, if you like, be a very general definition.
Going on from that, though, I think what is interesting about the current moment is there are a lot of
people who are playing around with this notion with
the result, of course, that it has become extremely
confused. But there are, I think, very good reasons
for that which probably come down to the fact that
we have, in all sorts of ways, multiplied what one
might call epistemology-speak, but that we are only
just now really starting to multiply ontology-speak.
And, of course, some of these attempts to rework
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
ontology will be extraordinarily hopeless and some
will not. But you can already see a number of links
to other arguments, for example, that there is not
just one ontology that one has to rely on; there
could be all sorts of them in the world. Similarly,
there is also the argument that there is absolutely
no reason to think that it would not be possible to
construct the predicates of ontology and, in a sense,
therefore, ‘the social’ becomes very, very intertwined with what we mean and how we do
ontology.
Yi-Fu Tuan. I have a question, which is simply this.
I have often heard it said that all western philosophies
are footnotes to Plato. So my question is: how did
Plato manage without using the word ‘ontology’?
Eric Sheppard. The only point I want to add is that
there has been this multiplication of ontologies, with
poststructuralist philosophies providing rationales
for a metastization of what the term means. I certainly agree that there is no meta-ontological position from which one can defend the one way in
which the world is supposed to be. My worry is what
is at stake when people deploy the term ‘ontology’
rhetorically, as a line in the sand. To say that my particular statement about spatiality is an ontological
statement runs a danger, in my view, of asserting
authority. It makes me (seem like) a real philosopher
if I can use the deepest of its (western) concepts, and
exert power over the conversation in this way. As I
suggested in my comments, when ontology becomes
a line in the sand, it is either ‘my ontology’ or ‘your
ontology’. But these are just different ways of seeing
the world. How do you actually engage in a constructive way beyond such oppositions?
Margaret Grieco (Edinburgh Napier
University, UK)
It would be interesting to see some discussion of
gender because it seems to me that we are not looking at gendered geographies . . . well we are looking
at gendered geography (the panel on the stage is
male, the audience is predominantly female), and
it is not very positive I have to say. But we should
be thinking about children’s geography that is going
Merriman et al.
on, the geography of older people, and indeed
gendered geography, women’s geography. And I
think if we are going to deal with ontology you could
kind of play with the notion that it is the boundaries of
our being, and in these different social situations we
have different boundaries around our beings. So possibly we have different epistemologies. So I think the
interesting question is: what is the relationship
between ontology and epistemology?
Peter Merriman. I thought the constitution of the
panel would come up as a question and I know Eric
mentioned it in his talk. I did not want to give a history of the constitution of the panel, but we had originally conceived three panels on the theme, and we
did invite a number of prominent female and feminist theorists of space to participate, as well as sociologists and philosophers, but unfortunately they were
unable to attend.
Eric Sheppard. All knowledge is situated and one has
to take into account the situatedness of this particular group of people and how we came together,
wittingly or unwittingly, as I suggested in my comments. So, absolutely: gender, ethnicity and all
kinds of other issues are important. I would like to
invite contributions from others that offer up those
other perspectives. As to the issue of epistemology
and ontology, the only thing I can offer on this is that
I talk to philosophers, and cannot even get them to
agree on what counts as an epistemology or an ontology when talking about particular debates in the philosophy of science, so I am just as ill-equipped as
they are to tell you exactly which is which under all
circumstances. I would argue that ontologies have
epistemological implications, absolutely (poststructuralists would argue the opposite: Dixon and Jones,
1998). What this means in terms of going beyond
epistemology to methodology is more complicated,
I think. Often there is a variety of methodological
approaches that will allow you take up certain kinds
of epistemological priorities. But I would not be surprised to learn that that is up for grabs as well.
Gunnar Olsson. I think it is important to realize that
epistemology and ontology are so intricately intertwined that the two cannot be separated, that you
15
cannot have one without the other. Yet it is difficult
to keep both in focus at the same time: when we are
trying to understand how something is, we are telling epistemological stories; when we are asking
what that something is, we are drawing ontological
pictures. What normally happens is that whenever
we run into problems with one of these techniques
of representation we try to handle them by switching
to the other; as epistemology anchors itself in ontology, so ontology transcends itself by shifting into
epistemology. But what does the growing interest
in what we are talking about tell us about the shortcomings of the languages we are talking in? Why
the strong drift away from ambiguity to certainty?
Is fundamentalism a political response to events
beyond our control, a way of dealing with a world
that refuses to sit still?
Whatever the answers there is no doubt that we
have experienced a most remarkable development.
Indeed I am willing to bet that in 1964, when I was
attending my first AAG annual meeting, very few of
us (myself included) knew what the terms ‘epistemology’ and ‘ontology’ actually meant.
Mauro Caraccioli (University of Florida, USA)
Earlier today Professor Jeff Malpas (University of
Tasmania) encouraged geographers not merely to sit
and read philosophers but to sort of sit down and
have a nice candlelit dinner with them and engage
in some dialogues, and throughout the session the
panellists have mentioned prominent philosophers,
e.g. Plato, Badiou. I would like to hear some more
of the panel’s thoughts on who are the particular
thinkers that they have had dialogues with across
their careers. But more importantly I would ask:
how much would you encourage contemporary geographers to pick a thinker or two to have that lifelong dialogue with?
Peter Merriman. Maybe we could expand the question to include people such as artists who have
inspired your thinking around space and spatiality,
or indeed practitioners in other fields.
Gunnar Olsson. As I have already stressed, there
are essentially two ways of communicating, one
16
through pictures, the other through stories. To any
geographer this should be exceptionally interesting,
because the place where the two modes come
together is in the map itself. The pictorial elements
are obvious: the legend, the scale, the projection, the
perspective. But why the story? Because the very
purpose of the map is to help us find the way. And
way-finding, my friends, is structured exactly as a
travel story, logical deduction the outstanding illustration of how the three fix-points of premises and
conclusion are woven together into a net of longitudes and latitudes. In my own attempts to understand the secrets of this art of triangulation, I have
drawn on a range of remarkable artists, all of them
explorers of the perspective, all of them well aware
that what I happen to see depends on where I happen
to stand: Filippo Brunelleschi, Paul Cézanne, Mark
Rothko, Marcel Duchamp, the latter the most profound critic of cartographic reason ever to be.
Nigel Thrift. It is an impossible question to answer in
all sorts of ways. Let me try to take what Gunnar
said and say the same thing in a slightly different
way. So if I was looking at the pictures that inspired
me, it would undoubtedly be those of Torsten
Hägerstrand. They said something more than just
the diagram itself. And they still say things, I think,
about open ambition, and a way of inscribing the
world which is very important. If you come on to
story, then the story that I think probably most
inspired me at one time would simply be that of
Marx. I do not think there is any doubt about that.
I think it is true to say that many people would think
that I had veered some way away from that story but,
at the same time, I think it is important to remember
the incredible sense of narrative drive that exists in
Marx. Going on from that, I think of two other
things. First, there are the kinds of thinkers who
want to draw you into their world. They have vast
vocabularies of one form or another that are often
initially completely incomprehensible so that you
have to spend all your time looking back to the definitions of the words they are using. Some of the
time, of course, there is a kind of game of bluff and
counterbluff going on. But writers like Gilles
Deleuze and Alfred North Whitehead have that kind
of capacity to, in a sense, try to conjure up a very
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
particular kind of world. And then, second, and
going on to what Gunnar was saying about maps, I
suppose the single artist who recently has inspired
me most is the artist Joyce Kozloff. She does some
extraordinary work on trying to remap maps in all
sorts of ways which have included trying to remap
gender (Kozloff, 2008). I can see in it something of
the same property as in Hägerstrand’s diagrams:
that sense of potentiality that comes from trying
to rewrite and refigure certain parts of what the
world is.
Yi-Fu Tuan. Well, being a person of my time, I find it
difficult to use ‘he’ and ‘she’ or just ‘she’ in what I
write. But I do not feel apologetic because the nongeographers, philosophers, writers who influenced
me most are: Susanne Langer (a student of Whitehead), Iris Murdoch and Hannah Arendt. But I
should also mention Maurice Merleau-Ponty for his
understanding of spatiality and the existentialists
(particularly Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus) for
their novelistic approach to the human condition.
And, by the way, apparently Claude Levi-Strauss
dismisses existentialism as ‘shop girl metaphysics’
(Maslin, 2010).
Eric Sheppard. In 1964, when Gunnar came to his
first AAG meeting, geography as a discipline was
seeking to ground its respectability through a claim
to be a science and having a rooting in science. I
sometimes wonder if we have now moved to try to
claim respectability by rooting ourselves in philosophy. And I take seriously Jeff Malpas’ challenge this
morning that while geographers may spend a lot of
time reading particular philosophers, do they actually sit down and debate with the philosophy profession about these issues and seek to learn from those
debates in the ways we wish economists would sit
down and debate with geographers about their conceptions of geography? Coming to your question, I
find this really hard to answer, partly because it
makes me feel old to be in a position to answer a
question like this, and in part because I think rattling
off a list of names is trying to create a claim to
expertise that I feel uncomfortable about. I would
say that my approach to the philosophical literature
has often been quite pragmatic. I have not chosen
Merriman et al.
one philosopher to read deeply, with the exception
of Marx. Rather, I have moved from one writer to
another, reading successively, shallowly and inexpertly, which I must acknowledge – perhaps seeking
inspiration in other registers for ideas that I am
thinking around in my head. The same goes for art.
I have got all kinds of painters I can think of who
have influenced me at various points in time, but
there is no one that stands out when a question like
this comes up. I guess the other cluster of thinkers
who have been important for me over the last five
to ten years, on my wayward ways through these literatures, has been philosophers of science, who
have exposed (for me) ways of thinking about
knowledge in a very different way.
Helga Leitner (University of Minnesota, USA)
I find it interesting that nobody mentioned that they
draw their inspiration from the people they do
research on or with, rather than just philosophers
and writers. My question, though, is for Nigel Thrift.
Nigel was arguing that the spatial template of the
world is changing, and he made a very interesting
and convincing argument about these new ‘movement-spaces’. I was wondering in how far, if we
speak of a spatial template of the world and we
speak of these new ‘movement-spaces’, we again
privilege a particular spatiality, the particular spatiality of mobility, and what happens to the symbolic
meaning of place, or scale and networks. Shouldn’t
we think about, for example, how these new ‘movement-spaces’ in turn articulate and redefine the
meaning of spaces?
Nigel Thrift. I want to say two things. The first is that
what I am arguing, relative to the conversations taking place, is that what we can see in the modern
world is epistemology leading to ontology. What
we are seeing is, in a sense, a way of knowing which
is becoming what is, and that is what I am arguing
this spatial template is actually producing. So I think
that is the first thing to say. The second thing is that,
within that process, if there is one thing I am sure
about it is that one of the impulses behind doing this
is the ability to actually mobilize and then harness
diversity, to be able to produce lots and lots of
17
so-called species of spaces of one form or another
which arise from a process of syndication rather than
difference. Because if you have more of such diversity you will also have more opportunities for profit.
And I think it would be naive to suggest that this
search after profit is not a factor in what is going on.
Emma Roe (University of Southampton, UK)
There has been a lot of reference to the humanities
(e.g. art) as potentially offering geography a
resource for theorizing space and spatiality. Natural
science has not yet been referenced in this debate. I
have spent quite a lot of time working with animal
scientists over the last five years and this year I have
had the opportunity to work with humanities academics. If I reflect on how as a cultural geographer
I felt working with these different disciplines, the
work with scientists felt constraining, limiting,
rigid, whereas with the humanities a soft flexibility,
new ways for thought to travel, a curiosity about
their processes and practices of study. It is just
remarkably different. Where can work in the natural
sciences take us in our continued theorization of
space and spatiality?
Eric Sheppard. Just a couple of thoughts on this. First
of all, I think we have to remember that the spatialities of the world in which we live are not constructed by humans alone but are constructed by
the socionatural processes which we shape and inhabit. So part of this is understanding the various kinds
of processes that we gather under the label of biology, ecology or earth science, and the ways in which
they constitute spatialities of the world which we
cohabit. So that is one area where, of course,
research in that tradition can be very helpful. My
second point is to suggest that I think that there is
often a false dualism between how humanists and
scientists think, and I say that as somebody who
does not think of himself as a humanist or a scientist.
My father is a scientist, who has taken to reading
philosophy of science after he retired, and he berates
me again and again, saying that the way scientists
actually work and think is much more like humanists than the caricature that is created of traditions
of scientific thinking. So, I would suggest,
18
notwithstanding protestations to the contrary,
scientists often think very much like humanists.
They get excited about things. They debate different
interpretations of the same phenomenon. They follow their passions. They get caught up in their predispositions as to what they are going to see. By the
same token, I think humanists are seeking their
own particular logical frameworks for making
sense of the world in a rigorous way. One of the
great things about being in a discipline like geography is that we have the capacity to construct conversations across these divides, even though the
conversation about spatiality has often remained
more or less on the human side of the discipline.
That is unfortunate: I think we have a lot to learn
from expanding our conceptions.
Yi-Fu Tuan. I may not be answering the question but I
feel that there has been a kind of a decline in standards in the humanities. When I was a student in
England in 1950 the most prestigious subject was
classics, not physics. Oxford University in 1948 did
not even have engineering. But I gather that the
humanities, even at these old British universities,
have declined. At my university now, University
of Wisconsin-Madison, there is this huge complex
of buildings devoted to science. The humanities
have become almost a kind of a playground for all
of us who do not feel that we know calculus very
well. But I am also struck by the degree of learning
that was called for in the humanities in the old
days. For instance there is the famous poet, A.E.
Housman, who was also Kennedy Professor of Latin
at the University of Cambridge. He is famous for
many things but, outstandingly, for compiling a
five-volume critical edition of Marcus Manilius’
Astronomicon (Housman, 1903–1930, 1937). He
was a second-rate Roman poet. A.E. Housman spent
years editing the work of a second-rate poet in the
2nd century AD. And he produced five volumes. And
you wonder, isn’t this a waste of time? Everybody
knows Manilius is not a great poet. But you see,
Manilius did write voluminously and the scholarship of these five volumes edited by Housman was
just astonishing because this Roman poet mentioned
everything, maybe a weed in his yard or the location
of the constellation in the sky. So, as the editor of
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
this work, Housman felt that he had to annotate
everything that this poet mentioned. If he mentioned
a pot, what was this pot made of? This would be
part of it. And he had to consult his colleagues in
astronomy to determine whether the stars were
located at that location. So it is a monumental,
almost geography-like, comprehensive work.
Nigel Thrift. Just a couple of points. Whether you like
it or not, science is a part of the world and is becoming more so over time. Indeed, in a sense, this links
into some of the things we have been talking about –
for example, recent developments in continental
philosophy that are basically trying to reinvent naturalism in all sorts of ways, often using scientific
motifs of one form or another. Then, to come back
to the point you made about humanities, in some
ways you were right but in other ways I think some
of the things that science does can instil just exactly
the same kinds of moments as the humanities. I am
thinking just of two things recently that I have
attended. One was a lecture by a quantum theorist
and I can honestly say I understood about 1% of
it. But one of the things that has become clear is that
it is now possible to set up an experiment in which
particles are interacting with no distance effect eight
miles apart. This is an extraordinary thing if it turns
out to be the case. The second thing was a British TV
programme which some of my colleagues may have
seen, which was headed by a physicist called Brian
Cox. Cox went into a cave somewhere in the world,
I cannot remember where, to introduce himself to a
being called snottite, which is named precisely as to
how it looks. But what is extraordinary about it is
that it breathes in sulphur dioxide and excretes sulphuric acid. And again I had no idea that that ‘life’
form existed and it is quite extraordinary. That sense
of wonder strikes me as common to the sciences and
the humanities. Moreover, there is a way in which
you can see the humanities coping with that sense
of scientific wonder. For example, we have a poet
in Warwick called David Morley who does beautiful
writing in this particular area (Morley, 2010). But I
suppose I also hold to the line that if we lose that
quality of wonder we also lose a vast amount of
what universities are about. I think that in some
senses universities are under siege and we do need
Merriman et al.
to remind ourselves about what institutions like
universities are about, as well as the many other
things we also need to attend to.
Afterword by Peter Merriman
and Martin Jones
In this afterword we do not want to try to summarize
the points raised by the four panellists and five audience members who asked questions. Rather than
close down the debate we would like to focus on two
related themes which might broadly be termed, first,
technologies of space and, second, languages of
space and spacing. First, despite the persistent
attempts of many social scientists to think and move
beyond Euclidean, Cartesian and Newtonian conceptions of space – as a dimensioned container or
measure of extension in the world – and approach
space as a social and cultural production, spaces are
envisioned and produced through all manner of
technologies of calculation, measurement and representation which, as Nigel Thrift points out, are
increasingly coming to shape how we experience
and understand the world. The increasing incorporation of complex computing technologies and software into western environments is generating a
‘qualculative world’ where ‘enhanced calculativity’
has merged into the ‘space-time background’, and
corporate bodies and governments are increasingly
able to locate and position agents and processes in
a relative ‘movement-space’ (Thrift, 2004: 596,
597). New media techniques are being incorporated
into the envisioning of spaces, and all of these different technologies are becoming important to how
we literally and metaphorically ‘write’ spaces in different ways (Thrift, 2009b). The extent to which we
can escape these scriptural conventions and economies is debatable. While a number of the contributors have highlighted the inventive and creative
ways in which we can think and inhabit spaces,
practise spaces differently, and resist dominant
scriptings and codifications of space, Thrift’s
account of the incorporation of these epistemologies, spacings and scriptings into western ontologies
could be seen to focus more on the dark processes of
encapturing and enspacing life than the creative consumptive practices by which people may re-enscript,
19
evade or ignore these codified geo-graphies, these
earthly and bodily writings.
Second, this leads us on to the question of
different languages of space and spatiality. On the
one hand, new technologies for understanding, measuring and representing space are frequently underpinned by new languages and modes of writing and
inscribing space and, as Gunnar Olsson alludes to in
his contribution, different practices and aesthetics of
writing enact different modes and styles of spacing.
On the other hand, the issue of language takes us
beyond the issue of inscription and aesthetics, for
the theories of space and spatiality which have
emerged from such diverse disciplines as mathematics, physics, architecture, geography, philosophy and anthropology are themselves underpinned
by different linguistic and scriptural traditions –
mathematical, logographic, phonemic – which are
closely aligned with epistemological and ontological assumptions about how the world is, what we
can know, how we can infer and conclude (cf.
Thrift, 2009b). Despite the mathematical forays of
philosophers such as Alain Badiou and the philosophical forays of physicists such as Ilya Prigogine, for
many observers mathematical equations, artistic
representations and the written words of philosophers
and humanities scholars are incommensurable modes
of writing which often underpin different epistemological and ontological world-views, being associated
with different languages of authority and differing
capacities for universality and translatability.
Despite the imperious and imperial position of
the English language in global affairs, there is no
universal written language for apprehending or
scripting space, and in their contributions both
Gunnar Olsson and Yi-Fu Tuan point out that concepts like space and place do not always translate
well into other languages and cultural contexts
(e.g. Chinese), nor are they easy to map onto classical concepts such as chora or topos (cf. Casey,
1998). Spatial theories, knowledges, languages and
ontologies need to be situated and s/placed in their
historical, geographical, cultural and political contexts, and we should not assume that there is a universal language for scripting, understanding or
representing space and spatiality. In remarking upon
the visual images or pictures which have most
20
inspired him, Nigel Thrift refers to the time-space
diagrams of the Swedish geographer Torsten
Hägerstrand. At first sight, Hägerstrand’s diagrams
may appear to have a clarity and simplicity that is
easily translated but, as Peter Gould pointed out in
1981, even Hägerstrand’s space-time geography
does not seamlessly translate from Swedish to English, for Anglophone understandings of space are
much broader than Germanic and Swedish understandings of space (rúm/room/raum) as delimited,
partitioned, constrained and located, incorporating
these with Latin/French understandings of space
(espace/spatium) as open, enlarged, infinite, liberated and free (Gould, 1981). In the past 50-odd years
of spatial theorizing there have only been intermittent discussions of such non-Anglophone linguistic
traditions and non-western cultural practices by
which space and spatiality are understood and
inhabited differently. Our languages of space, then,
raise important issues of difference, translation,
power and authority, and we could extend these
beyond issues of cultural and linguistic difference
to encompass the broader positioning and positionality of the panellists in this article. As a number of
panellists and questioners observed, this panel was
all-male, and its constitution – like recent attempts
by others to draw up lists of ‘key thinkers’ (Hubbard
and Kitchin, 2011; Environment and Planning A,
2005) – might be seen to: first, inadvertently reflect
and reinforce the gender inequalities of the discipline; and, second, to be in danger of presenting a
series of universalized masculine theorizations of
space (cf. Rose, 1993). First, it was not our intention
to have one all-male panel. When we were planning
the sessions in late 2009 we were intending to organize two or three panels, and we invited a number
of prominent female and feminist theorists of space
to participate, as well as a number of prominent philosophers, sociologists and anthropologists, all of
whom were unable to attend. We hope this deficiency will be rectified in the published responses
to this article. On the second point, however, none
of the four speakers claim to describe a singular or
universal experience of space or place, and their
clearly situated and carefully positioned responses
reflect their own diverse biographies and philosophical and career trajectories. While acknowledging
Dialogues in Human Geography 2(1)
their gender and their relatively privileged positions
within academia, we would not wish to flatten
their biographies and simply pigeonhole them as
members of a homogenized Euro-American male
academic elite.
Acknowledgements
Pete and Martin would like to thank the speakers and
audiences of all three sessions on ‘Space and Spatiality
in Theory’ at the 2010 AAG Annual Conference, and the
audience members who kindly agreed for their questions
to be reproduced in the article.
Funding
Pete would like to acknowledge the financial support of
the AHRC, Award Ref AH/H00243X/1. Martin would
like to acknowledge the financial support of WISERD –
Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data
and Methods – funded by ESRC and HEFCW.
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