Object structure
Title:

Anglo-amerykańska dominacja w geografii: główne wątki dyskusji prowadzonej w ramach geografii krytycznej = Anglo-American domination in geography. The main threads of a discussionconducted within the framework of critical geography

Subtitle:

Przegląd Geograficzny T. 82 z. 2 (2010)

Creator:

Bajerski A. (1981– )

Publisher:

IGiPZ PAN

Place of publishing:

Warszawa

Date issued/created:

2010

Description:

24 cm

Type of object:

Journal/Article

Subject and Keywords:

Anglo-American geography ; geographical journals ; critical geography ; language of publication

References:

1. Aalbers M.B., 2004, Creative destruction through the Anglo-American hegemony: A non-Anglo-American view on publications, referees and language, Area, 36, 3, s. 319–322.
2. Aalbers M.B., Rossi U., 2006, Beyond the Anglo-American hegemony in human geography: A European perspective, GeoJournal, 67, 2, s. 137–147.
3. Aalbers M.B., Rossi U., 2007, A coming community: Young geographers coping with multi-tier spaces of academic publishing across Europe, Social and Cultural Geography, 8, 2, s. 283–302.
4. Belina B., 2005, Anglophones: If you want us to understand you, you will have to speak understandably, Antipode, 37, 5, s. 853–855.
5. Berg L.D., Kearns R.A., 1998, America unlimited, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 16, 2, s. 128–132.
6. Desforges L., Jones R., 2001, Geographies of languages/Languages of geography, Social and Cultural Geography, 2, 3, s. 261–264.
7. The Dictionary of Human Geography (fourth edition), 2000, Blackwell Publishers Ltd, Oxford.
8. Garcia-Ramon M.D., 2003, Globalization and international geography: The questions of languages and scholarly traditions, Progress in Human Geography, 27, 1, s. 1–5.
9. Garcia-Ramon M.D., 2004, The spaces of critical geography: an introduction, Geoforum, 35, 5, s. 523–524.
10. Gregson N., Simonsen K., Vaiou D., 2003, Writing (across) Europe: On writing spaces and writing practices, European Urban and Regional Studies, 10, 1, s. 5–22.
11. Guttiérrez J., López-Nieva P., 2001, Are international journals of human geography really international?, Progress in Human Geography, 25, 1, s. 53–69.
12. Harris C.D., 2001, English as international language in geography: development and limitations, Geographical Review, 91, 4, s. 675–689.
13. Hassink R., 2007, It’s the language stupid! On emotions, strategies, and consequences related to the use of only one language to describe and explain a diverse world, Environment and Planning A, 39, 6, s. 1282–1287.
14. Helms G., Lossau J., Oslender U., 2005, Einfach sprachlos but not simply speechless: Language(s), thought and practice in the social sciences, Area, 37, 3, s. 242–250.
15. Johnston R.J., 1979, Geography and Geographers. Anglo-American Human Geography since 1945, Edward Arnold, London.
16. Johnston R.J., 2005, On journals, Environment and Planning A, 37, 1, s. 2–8.
17. Kitchin R., 2005, Disrupting and destabilizing Anglo-American and English-language hegemony in geography, Social and Cultural Geography, 6, 1, s. 1–15.
18. Minca C., 2000, Venetian geographical praxis, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 18, 2, s. 285–289.
19. Minca C., 2003, Critical peripheries, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 21, 2, s. 160–168.
20. Moss P., Berg L.D., Desbiens C., 2002, The political economy of publishing in geography, ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies, 1, 1, s. 1–7.
21. Olds K., Poon J., 2002, Theories and discourses of economic geography: Papers from Singapore Conference on Economic Geography, December 2000, Environment and Planning A, 34, 3, s. 379–383.
22. Paasi A., 2005, Globalisation, academic capitalism and the uneven geographies of international journal publishing spaces, Environment and Planning A, 37, 5, s. 769–789.
23. Pénot J., Agnew J, 1998, How cultural boundaries limit intellectual horizons: Reflections on the untimely death of Joël Bonnemaison (1940–1997), Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 16, 2, s. 253–256.
24. Rodríguez-Pose A., 2004, On English as a vehicle to preserve geographical diversity, Progress in Human Geography, 28, 1, s. 1–4.
25. Rodríguez-Pose A., 2006, Is there an ‘Anglo-American’ domination in human geography? And, is it bad?, Environment and Planning A, 38, 4, s. 603–610.
26. Samers M., Sidaway J.D., 2000, Exclusions, inclusions and occlusions in ‘Anglo-American geography’: Reflections on Minca’s “Venetian geographical praxis”, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 18, 5, s. 663–666.
27. Short J.R., Boniche A., Kim Y., Li Li P., 2001, Cultural globalization, global English, and geography journals, Professional Geographer, 53, 1, s. 1–11.
28. Simonsen K., 2004, Differential spaces of critical geography, Geoforum, 35, 5, s. 525–528.
29. Timár J., 2004, More than ‘Anglo-American’, it is ‘Western’: hegemony in geography from Hungarian perspective, Geoforum, 35, 5, s. 533–538.
30. Whitehand J.W.R., 2005, The problem of Anglophone squint, Area, 37, 2, s. 228–230.
31. Whitehand J.W.R., Edmondson P.M., 1977, Europe and America. The reorientation in geographical communication in the post-war period, Professional Geographer, 29, 3, s. 278–282.
32. Vaiou D., 2004, The contested and negotiated dominance of Anglophone geography in Greece, Geoforum, 35, 5, s. 529–531.
33. Yeung H.W., 2001, Redressing the geographical bias in social science knowledge, Environment and Planning A, 33, 1, s. 1–9.

Relation:

Przegląd Geograficzny

Volume:

82

Issue:

2

Start page:

143

End page:

158

Resource type:

Text

Detailed Resource Type:

Article

Format:

File size 0,5 MB ; application/pdf

Resource Identifier:

0033-2143 ; 10.7163/PrzG.2010.2.1

Source:

CBGiOS. IGiPZ PAN, call nos.: Cz.181, Cz.3136, Cz.4187 ; click here to follow the link

Language:

pol

Language of abstract:

eng

Rights:

Rights Reserved - Free Access

Terms of use:

Copyright-protected material. May be used within the limits of statutory user freedoms

Digitizing institution:

Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Original in:

Central Library of Geography and Environmental Protection. Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization PAS

Projects co-financed by:

Programme Innovative Economy, 2010-2014, Priority Axis 2. R&D infrastructure ; European Union. European Regional Development Fund

Access:

Open

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