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Taking Place: Affective Urban Geographies

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aking Place research group proposes to attend to the ways in which particular places elicit networks of affective resonances. The critical practice of examining emotive responses to the external environment has recently gained prominence across a wide spectrum of academic disciplines, including geography, literary studies, anthropology, history, and philosophy. Given its flexibility across diverse modes of analysis, the notion of affect can be deployed in an interdisciplinary context to open up creative new insights into the ways we encounter, live in, and move through particular places. For instance, our group intends to explore the ways in which affective relations to place vary in different geopolitical and socioeconomic contexts, such as the global south. Furthermore, issues of entitlement, displacement and spatially configured processes of identity formation can lead to substantially fraught types of affective geographies. We intend to push such concerns further in the 2013/14 incarnation of Taking Place, particularly by exploring non-western theoretical perspectives.

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0 upcoming talks and 2 talks in the archive.

Taking Place: 'The Distributed Unconscious: what happens in Vegas? (Prof. Steve Pile)

UserProf. Steve Pile (Human Geography, The Open University).

HouseCRASSH, SG2, ground floor, Alison Richard Building.

ClockWednesday 13 November 2013, 17:00-19:00

Distant Voices, Still Lives: Contemporary Youth Subcultures and Surplus Affect on the Urban Scene

UserDr. Jo-Anne Dillabough (Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge).

HouseCRASSH, SG2, ground floor, Alison Richard Building.

ClockWednesday 30 October 2013, 17:00-19:00

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