Inconvenience, ambivalence, and abolition: A politics of attachment and detachment in geography
Cockayne, Daniel; Ruez, Derek (2023-01-18)
Cockayne, Daniel
Ruez, Derek
18.01.2023
DIALOGUES IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202305045189
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202305045189
Kuvaus
Non peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
In this commentary, we explore the idea of detachment that we see as central to Anderson's notion of attachment but that nevertheless does not take centre stage in the paper. We situate detachment not as attachment's antithesis, opposite, or negative, but as its structural condition and as irretrievably interwoven with attachment. Through Berlant's recent writing, we foreground the notion of ambivalence as a way to think about the complexity of attachment–detachment and to foreground politics and differences in these processes. Then, we draw on abolitionist writers like Gilmore and Lewis to highlight the complicated intersection of structural and affective attachment and to consider the possible intellectual and political stakes of pursuing a geography of attachment.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [24742]