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100 _aKeighren, Innes M.
_958500
245 _aHistory and philosophy of geography III:
_bThe haunted, the reviled, and the plural/
260 _bSage,
_c2020.
300 _aVol. 44, issue 1, 2020 ( 160–167 p.).
520 _aThis report takes a new English-language translation of Friedrich Ratzel’s infamous essay Der Lebensraum (1901) as a prompt to consider the ethical questions that are raised by revisiting geography’s dangerous ideas and discredited practitioners. Attending to a series of recent interventions that offer new readings of Ratzel and his essay, I consider how historiographical practice and moral obligation intersect in the process of making sense of, and coming to terms with, disciplinary pasts that haunt the present. The report concludes by considering the future of the series of which it forms part and argues that the task of narrating progress in the history and philosophy of geography should be assumed by a more diverse range of authors than has heretofore been the case.
773 0 _012579
_917141
_dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
_tProgress in human geography/
_x 03091325
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0309132518818725
942 _2ddc
_cEJR
999 _c14898
_d14898