ABSTRACT

This book argues that practices of resistance cannot be separated from practices of domination, and that they are always entangled in some configuration. They are inextricably linked, such that one always bears at least a trace of the other that contaminates or subverts it.
The team of contributors explore themes of identity, embodiment, organisation, colonialism, and political transformation, examining them from historical, contemporary and more abstract perspectives within a wide geographical and cultural spectrum. Case studies include German Reunification; Jamaican Yardies on British Television; Victorian Sexuality and Moralisation in Cremorne Gardens; Ethnicity, Gender and Nation in Ecuador; Sport as Power; the film Falling Down.
Entanglements of Power presents an exciting and challenging account of the symbiotic relationship between domination and resistance, and contextualises this within the parameters of geography with a rich body of case-study material and a respected team of contributors.

chapter |42 pages

Entanglements of Power

Geographies of domination/resistance

chapter |26 pages

Power as Friendship

Spatiality, femininity and ‘noisy' surveillance

chapter |29 pages

Nomadic Strategies and Colonial Governance

Domination and resistance in Cyrenaica, 1923—1932

chapter |16 pages

Sport as Power

Running as resistance?

chapter |22 pages

Jamaican Yardies on British Television

Dominant representations, spaces for resistance?

chapter |15 pages

Organisational Geographies

Surveillance, display and the spaces of power in business organisation

chapter |19 pages

Entangled Humans

Specifying powers and their spatialities

chapter |18 pages

Anti-this — Against-that

Resistances along a human—non-human axis

chapter |13 pages

Falling Down

Resistance as diagnostic

chapter |10 pages

Entanglements of Power

Shadows?

chapter |8 pages

Entanglements of Power

Reflections