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What future for feminist geography?
31
Citations
42
References
1994
Year
ColonialismCritical PositioningFeminist GeographySocial SciencesLikely TrajectoryFeminist ResearchGender StudiesTransnational FeminismsCommunity GeographyFeminist Literary TheoryWomen StudiesGeopoliticsCultural GeographyGeohumanitiesFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityFeminist ScienceIndigenous FeminismsFeminist TheoryFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophyHumanitiesPolitical GeographyCritical GeographyFeminist MethodEthical Geography
Abstract Drawing primarily on my own work, speculations are offered on a range of possible futures for feminist geography. It is suggested that the most likely trajectory is one of incorporation as feminist geography is dismissed, regarded with indifference or included within a pluralist, but basically unaltered discipline. While a contentious and depressing suggestion, an alternative trajectory is offered by a feminist geography which actively engages with other progressive developments in the discipline and creatively incorporates new developments in feminist scholarship on, for example, the body, deconstruction and post‐colonialism. A third future builds on such engagements to offer various transformations of the subject, power relations and conceptual baggage which presently constitute feminist geography, through a process of self‐reflection and critical positioning. These three trajectories of incorporation, engagement and transformation I see as simultaneously operating in my own work. Reflections on them are offered for others to consider and to stimulate debate.
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