Imagined geographies

Imagined geographies

The concept of imagined geographies has evolved out of the work of Edward Said, particularly his critique on Orientalism. In this term, ‘imagined’ is used not to mean ‘false’ or ‘made-up’, but ‘perceived’. It refers to the perception of space created through certain images, texts or discourses. Imagined geographies can be seen as a form of social constructionism on par with Benedict Anderson's concept of imagined communities.

Orientalism

In his book on Orientalism, Edward Said argued that western culture had produced a view of the ‘Orient’ based on a particular imagination, popularized through academic Oriental studies, travel writing and a colonial view of the Orient. The area was feminized as an open, virgin territory, with no ability or concept of organized rule and government. Karl Marx, for example, shows this Orientalist style when describing an India without politics, and Hindu people as ‘passive’, ‘helpless’, ‘vegetative’, ‘undignified’ and ‘stationary’.

Development of theory

Said was heavily influenced by Michel Foucault, and those who have developed the theory of imagined geographies have linked these together. Imagined geographies are thus seen as a tool of power, of a means of controlling and subordinating areas. Power is seen as being in the hands of those who have the right to objectify those that they are imagining.

Further writers to have been heavily influenced by the concept of imagined geographies included Derek Gregory and Gerόaid Ó’ Tuathail. Gregory argues that the War on Terror shows a continuation of the same imagined geographies that Said uncovered. He claims that the Islamic world is portrayed as uncivilized; it is labeled as backward and failing. This justifies, in the view of those imagining, the military intervention that has been seen in Afghanistan and Iraq. Ó' Tuathail has argued that geopolitical knowledges are forms of imagined geography. Using the example of Halford Mackinder's Heartland Theory, he has shown how the presentation of Eastern Europe/Western Russia as a key geopolitcial region after World War I influenced actions such as the recreation of Poland and the Polish Corridor in the 1918 Treaty of Versailles.

This theory has also been used to critique several geographies created; both historically and contemporarily. Samuel Huntington’s "Clash of Civilizations" has also been criticized as showing a whole set of imagined geographies. By following stereotypes and popular discourses and images, Huntington brackets whole sections of the earth into ‘civilization groups’ that are constantly at conflict. Halford Mackinder's 'imperial gaze' has also been shown as an important imagined geography [http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/routledg/rcjo/2000/00000011/00000001/art00005] . This emphasised the importance of the British Empire over colonial peoples, and asserted the view of the geographical 'expert' with the 'God's eye view'.

The implications of imagined geographies

Imagined geographies show the problems created by the use of popular discourse to construct views of other regions or societies. All landscapes are seen as being imagined – there is no ‘real’ geography to which the imagined ones can be compared. Thus when being analyzed, these geographies should not be ‘measured’ for their ‘accuracy’, but de-constructed so that the power invested in them can be revealed.

References

*Huntington, Samuel, 1991, Clash of Civilizations
*Gregory, Derek, 2004, ‘The Colonial Present’, Blackwell
*Marx, Karl, [1853] ‘The British Rule In India’ in Macfie, A.L. (ed.), 2000, ‘Orientalism: A Reader’, Edinburgh University Press
*Ó' Tuathail, Gearoid, 1996, 'Critical Geopolitcs:The Writing of Global Space, Routledge
*Said, Edward, [1978] 1995, ‘Orientalism’, Penguin Books


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Imagined communities — The imagined community is a concept coined by Benedict Anderson which states that a nation is a community socially constructed, which is to say imagined by the people who perceive themselves as part of that group.Anderson, Benedict. Imagined… …   Wikipedia

  • Outline of geography — See also: Index of geography articles The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to geography: Geography – science that studies the lands, features, inhabitants, and phenomena of Earth.[1] The physical world …   Wikipedia

  • Human geography — is a branch of geography that focuses on the study of patterns and processes that shape human interaction with the environment, with particular reference to the causes and consequences of the spatial distribution of human activity on the Earth s… …   Wikipedia

  • Political geography — is the field of human geography that is concerned with the study of both the spatially uneven outcomes of political processes and the ways in which political processes are themselves affected by spatial structures. Conventionally political… …   Wikipedia

  • Objectification — is the process by which an abstract concept is made as objective as possible in the purest sense of the term. It is also treated as if it is a concrete thing or physical object. In this sense the term is a synonym to reification. This term is… …   Wikipedia

  • Derek Gregory — Ph.D. (Cantab) FBA, FRCC (January 3, 1951) is an influential British academic and geographer who is currently Professor of Political Geography at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. He formerly held positions at the University of… …   Wikipedia

  • Owain Jones — Dr Owain Jones (born 1957, Newport, Wales) is a Senior Research Fellow at Countryside Community Research Institute (which is a joint Institute of the Universities of the West of England and Gloucestershire and the Royal Agricultural College and… …   Wikipedia

  • geography — /jee og reuh fee/, n., pl. geographies. 1. the science dealing with the areal differentiation of the earth s surface, as shown in the character, arrangement, and interrelations over the world of such elements as climate, elevation, soil,… …   Universalium

  • Ron Martin — is professor of economic geography at the Department of Geography University of Cambridge. He is also a fellow of the Cambridge MIT Institute, research associate of the Centre for Business Research and professorial fellow of St Catharine s… …   Wikipedia

  • Market — For other uses, see Market (disambiguation). San Juan de Dios Market in Guadalajara, Jalisco …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”