Authors
Ben Anderson, Matthew Kearnes, Colin McFarlane, Dan Swanton
Publication date
2012/7
Journal
Dialogues in human geography
Volume
2
Issue
2
Pages
171-189
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
In this paper we explore what assemblage thinking offers social-spatial theory by asking what questions or problems assemblage responds to or opens up. Used variously as a concept, ethos and descriptor, assemblage thinking can be placed within the context of the recent ‘relational turn’ in human geography. In this context, we argue that assemblage thinking offers four things to contemporary social-spatial theory that, when taken together, provide an alternative response to the problematic of ‘relational’ thought: an experimental realism orientated to processes of composition; a theorization of a world of relations and that which exceeds a present set of relations; a rethinking of agency in distributed terms and causality in non-linear, immanent, terms; and an orientation to the expressive capacity of assembled orders as they are stabilized and change. In conclusion, we reflect on some further questions of politics and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Anderson, M Kearnes, C McFarlane, D Swanton - Dialogues in human geography, 2012