2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4762.2011.01004.x
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Assemblage and geography

Abstract: In this introduction to the special section on 'Assemblage and geography ' , we

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Cited by 628 publications
(442 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…Key to an assemblage is that the parts that compose it are heterogeneous and independent, and it is from the relations between the parts that the temporary, contingent whole emerges (see B. Anderson & McFarlane, 2011;B. Anderson et al, 2012).…”
Section: Matter and Timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Key to an assemblage is that the parts that compose it are heterogeneous and independent, and it is from the relations between the parts that the temporary, contingent whole emerges (see B. Anderson & McFarlane, 2011;B. Anderson et al, 2012).…”
Section: Matter and Timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In time, as the RomaneIrish Bath spread to Britain and Germany and other managers and owners became involved, the form of the baths changed, with the arrival of steam in particular, making them more sauna-like in operation (Shifrin, 2013). There were other fractures within that process, evident in the ways in which urban baths departed from the Barterian template via alterations shaped by location and the commercial intent of the developers (Anderson & McFarlane, 2011). This was especially evident in the less medico-moral and more publicsocial versions of the baths at St. Stephen's Green or Lincoln Place in Dublin (Breathnach, 2004).…”
Section: Mobile Networkmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In Anderson and McFarlane's (2011) discussion of the complexity of the assemblage idea, they provide no definitive applications or easy guides to translating the concepts into empirical form. What is valuable is their listing of four inter-related sets of processes.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A city of permanent experiments is thus a provisional achievement and one that is always 'in the making'. This also connects to recent theoretical contributions on assemblage theory and sociotechnical urban systems (Anderson & McFarlane, 2011;Brenner et al, 2011;Farías, 2011;McFarlane, 2011b;Gopakumar, 2014) that recognises that cities do not have an end point but are always unfolding and evolving, they are processes rather than products. As McFarlane (2011b: 650) notes, the city here is understood as a "gathering process" rather than an end state.…”
Section: Embracing Uncertaintymentioning
confidence: 99%