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100 _aElizabeth R Johnson,
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245 _aGeontographies: On Elizabeth Povinelli’s Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism
260 _bSage,
_c2019.
300 _aVol 37, Issue 8, 2019 (1319-1342 p.)
520 _aThis forum brings together perspectives from geography, philosophy, and political science to reflect on Elizabeth Povinelli’s, 2016 book, Geontologies: A Requiem for Late Liberalism. Contributions come from both junior and senior scholars across a range of interests and backgrounds. Elizabeth Povinelli’s Geontologies is the fourth in her series on Dwelling in Late Liberalism that began in 1994 with Labor’s Lot: The Power, History and Culture of Aboriginal Action. In this latest text, she offers a retheorization of power and governance that challenges Foucauldian biopolitics. In its place, Povinelli maps a mode of power that she calls geontopower: a power that operates over the distinction between Life and Nonlife. Together with accounts of ethnographic encounters in Indigenous Australia, Povinelli’s text weaves together political theory, anthropology, philosophy, and cultural studies. With consequences for human geographers as well as thinkers concerned with the Anthropocene, climate change, and new materialism, Povinelli’s work connects the experience of late liberalism and settler colonialism across space, place, and matter.
650 _aGeopower,
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650 _acolonialism,
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650 _aextraction,
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650 _abiopolitics,
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650 _aAnthropocene
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700 _aGarnet Kindervater,
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700 _aZoe Todd,
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700 _aKathryn Yusoff,
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700 _aKeith Woodward,
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700 _aElizabeth A Povinelli
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773 0 _08872
_915873
_dLondon Pion Ltd. 2010
_tEnvironment and planning C:
_x1472-3425
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/2399654419875148
942 _2ddc
_cART