2019
DOI: 10.1177/1474474019832356
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Words and worlds: textual representation and new materialism

Abstract: In recent years, academic disciplines across the social sciences and humanities have witnessed a surge of interest around questions of materiality. One strand of this work has been ambitious in its attempts to theorise ‘things-in-themselves’, or the nature and potential of matter, constituting what has come to be called a ‘new materialism’. Geographers have been particularly influential in these debates, especially through research conducted in the style of non-representational theory. In this work, much empha… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
14
0
2

Year Published

2019
2019
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
7
2

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 19 publications
(16 citation statements)
references
References 19 publications
0
14
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Linked to this recognition is the necessity of providing other ways of knowing and narrating the economy as a means of transforming the relations we hold with ourselves, the world and the future (Gibson-Graham et al, 2013). We see in new materialist approaches an effort to go further in interrogating the limits of language and representation by exploring ‘things-in-themselves’ as materialities and forces (Daya, 2019: 361). Cultivating new feminist geographical knowledges by taking up the work of Irigaray (often in relation to Deleuze), scholars investigate the nature and potential of bodies and matter beyond their ideological articulations and discursive inscriptions (e.g.…”
Section: Beyond the Wave Metaphor: The Times And Spaces Of Feminist Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Linked to this recognition is the necessity of providing other ways of knowing and narrating the economy as a means of transforming the relations we hold with ourselves, the world and the future (Gibson-Graham et al, 2013). We see in new materialist approaches an effort to go further in interrogating the limits of language and representation by exploring ‘things-in-themselves’ as materialities and forces (Daya, 2019: 361). Cultivating new feminist geographical knowledges by taking up the work of Irigaray (often in relation to Deleuze), scholars investigate the nature and potential of bodies and matter beyond their ideological articulations and discursive inscriptions (e.g.…”
Section: Beyond the Wave Metaphor: The Times And Spaces Of Feminist Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In epistemological terms, there is of course no representation that is immaterial and no material without representation (Rose and Tolia-Kelly, 2012). I move past the conceptual concern ‘of whether the discursive and the material are separate realms’ (Daya, 2019: 372), and instead examine what representations do , how are they made and how they make a difference (Anderson, 2019). In doing this, I examine removal as a knowledge-producing assemblage; Michelle Murphy (2006: 3) articulates this as a ‘technical and social constellation of words, things, practices, and people’.…”
Section: The Matter Of Removalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Partly in response to these discussions and disagreements, recent work on culture as mediated experience expands what Grossberg (2010) calls the channels and forms of mediation beyond the linguistic-discursive, without ignoring the force and feel of representations as they become with lived experience (witness, for example, Harris and Nowicki (2018) on ‘imaginaries’, Daya (2019) on how ‘words make worlds’, and Mendas and Lau (2019) on the affectivity of ‘narrations’). First, a series of affective conditions – structures of feeling or moods or atmospheres – are taken to mediate lived experience (Bille and Simonsen, 2019; Raynor, 2016).…”
Section: Culture As ‘Mediated Experience’mentioning
confidence: 99%