2005
DOI: 10.7202/021977ar
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La géographie évolue. Elle est utile. Mais les géographes le sont peut-être moins…

Abstract: Un autre colloque épistémologique. Signe de santé ou symptôme de pathologie ? La géographie a changé, certes. Parce que les temps changent. Parce que les géographes ont voulu se rendre plus utiles. Mais la lecture de certains périodiques laisse perplexe. La géographie, est-ce bien ce que font les géographes? La géographie universitaire ne serait-elle pas plus utile si elle était d'abord plus utilisable? Par qui donc les géographes veulent-ils être admirés? Par quelques spécialistes ou par le grand public?Is an… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Crying wolf (or denying any problems) ends up becoming an easy way of getting heard in the precise journals presented as vigilant gatekeepers. Our worry is that, despite cautious attempts to present nuance, such debates are never very far from recycling national clichés and enshrining national spaces as inevitable, a point first made by Bérubé (1988). We are very conscious that this paper itself is not immune to such a risk: by focusing on an Italian geographer, and positioning him explicitly as such by exploring his complex connections -or lack thereof -to Anglo geography and geographers, we risk renaturalizing such artificial divides.…”
Section: Spaces Of Debatementioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Crying wolf (or denying any problems) ends up becoming an easy way of getting heard in the precise journals presented as vigilant gatekeepers. Our worry is that, despite cautious attempts to present nuance, such debates are never very far from recycling national clichés and enshrining national spaces as inevitable, a point first made by Bérubé (1988). We are very conscious that this paper itself is not immune to such a risk: by focusing on an Italian geographer, and positioning him explicitly as such by exploring his complex connections -or lack thereof -to Anglo geography and geographers, we risk renaturalizing such artificial divides.…”
Section: Spaces Of Debatementioning
confidence: 97%
“…Is this simply, then, just another story of missed opportunities, of a lack of communication between language domains and their respective cognitive communities? Surprisingly, not even French-speaking geographers -who were in those years rather close to their Italian peers, or at least certainly more so than to Englishspeaking ones -acknowledged the appearance of such an innovative and far-ranging book, notwithstanding a number of engagements with it (Bérubé, 1988;Besse, 1988;Torricelli, 1987). Saying, retrospectively, that this was a prophetic book does not tell us much about what was happening then.…”
Section: Contested and Situated Historiesmentioning
confidence: 99%