2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhg.2005.10.009
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The last outpost of Empire: Rockall and the Cold War

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Cited by 19 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In this vein, MacDonald's (2006) evocative study of Rockall, a tiny uninhabited North Atlantic islet that in 1955 became the last piece of territory to be formally annexed by the United Kingdom, is a marvelous investigation of the interconnections of geography, science, and British statehood through the periods of empire and Cold War. Cook (2004) used a study of papaya commodity chains to unpack multiple and highly contrasting experiences of work and consumption in different sites in Jamaica and the United Kingdom.…”
Section: Biographies Of Medicine Chests Rivers Rockall-and Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this vein, MacDonald's (2006) evocative study of Rockall, a tiny uninhabited North Atlantic islet that in 1955 became the last piece of territory to be formally annexed by the United Kingdom, is a marvelous investigation of the interconnections of geography, science, and British statehood through the periods of empire and Cold War. Cook (2004) used a study of papaya commodity chains to unpack multiple and highly contrasting experiences of work and consumption in different sites in Jamaica and the United Kingdom.…”
Section: Biographies Of Medicine Chests Rivers Rockall-and Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, the Hebridean landscape and seascape not only became a theatre in the specular sense, but a theatre of military operations and the arena of clandestine military intelligence. The visibility of state secrets became such a matter of national security that the British state was forced to annex the hitherto unclaimed stack of Rockall, simply to monopolize what was one of the most valuable perceptual fields in the world (MacDonald forthcoming). The geopolitical theatre of the Cold War consisted of many such minor cameos: oddly literal struggles for visual dominance.…”
Section: ‘The Vision Thing    Is Always More Than Just a Vision Thmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recently, researchers have suggested ways in which the Cold War can be studied in self-reflective, microsociological, and more than textual ways (MacDonald, 2006a;Matless et al, 2008), paying attention in particular to abandoned military landscapes, including bunkers (Bennett, 2011a;2011b;Woodward, 2014, page 46). Whilst geographers have long argued that Cold War geopolitics emerged smoothly from fascist and imperialist mappings (MacDonald, 2006b;Ó Tuathail, 1996, page 87), the question of Cold War biopolitics is yet to be explored and placed in its historical context. This paper makes a tentative step in this direction, refocusing the question of geopolitics and biopolitics from the camp onto what is perhaps the most defining of Cold War spaces: the nuclear bunker.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%