Island Geographies: Essays and conversations

Author:   Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138921726


Pages:   212
Publication Date:   03 November 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Island Geographies: Essays and conversations


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Full Product Details

Author:   Elaine Stratford (University of Tasmania, Australia)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.550kg
ISBN:  

9781138921726


ISBN 10:   1138921726
Pages:   212
Publication Date:   03 November 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"1. Introduction (Elaine Stratford) 2. The deep Pacific: island governance and seabed mineral development (Katherine Genevieve Sammler) 3. Islands and lighthouses: a phenomenological geography of Cape Bruny, Tasmania (Thérèse Murray) 4. Too much sail for a small craft? Donor requirements, scale, and capacity discourses in Kiribati (Annika Dean, Donna Green, and Patrick D. Nunn) 5. An island feminism: convivial economics and the women’s cooperatives of Lesvos (Marina Karides) 6. Nature and islands: rethinking the cultural heritage of New Zealand’s protected islands (David Bade) 7. ""The good garbage"": waste-to-energy applications and issues in the insular Caribbean (Russell Fielding) 8. The returning terms of a small island culture: mimicry, inventiveness, suspension (Jon Pugh) 9. Conversations on human geography and island studies (Elaine Stratford and the authors) 10. Retrospect and prospect (Stephen Royle)"

Reviews

The manner in which the Editor has worked to link structure to the coherence of analysis is one of the outstanding features of this neatly presented book... A bibliography that supplements all 10 chapters and which is impressive in its coherence and scope...The penultimate chapter adds a reaffirming endnote to the discussions that had preceded this point in the cumulative narrative. Readers who are aspiring researchers in these overlapping fields of geographical enquiry can take inspiration from this conversation. Keith Jackson (2019): Islands, maps, conflicts: the recurring relevance of physical geography in the Asia Pacific, Asia Pacific Business Review, DOI: 10.1080/13602381.2019.1686244 In Island Geographies, an impressive and diverse collection of essays, and a terrific, but singular conversation, considers the contemporary implications and challenges the dominance of continental discourse... Island Geographies calls into question the very processes by which we imagine things to bound into an impermeable category when they are entangled in mobile, changeable, and relational settings...This collection draws its readers away from the dominant paradigm of continental thinking; it draws us away from thinking of islands as simplistically insular-as small spaces of isolation. Instead, through discussion of the complexities of deep sea mining, climate change and management of environmental, cultural and heritage values and approaches to economic sustainability, waste management and literary and political representations of islandness, island geographies are revealed less categorical, more entangled, and less bounded than they might seem from the limitations of continental perspectives. Island Geographies invites rethinking much that is taken-for-granted-and in the process often claimed or taken by those empowered by continental discourses. Book Review by Richard Howitt, Macquarie University, Australia in Geographical Research (2018, 56(2), 241-245)


In Island Geographies, an impressive and diverse collection of essays, and a terrific, but singular conversation, considers the contemporary implications and challenges the dominance of continental discourse... Island Geographies calls into question the very processes by which we imagine things to bound into an impermeable category when they are entangled in mobile, changeable, and relational settings...This collection draws its readers away from the dominant paradigm of continental thinking; it draws us away from thinking of islands as simplistically insular-as small spaces of isolation. Instead, through discussion of the complexities of deep sea mining, climate change and management of environmental, cultural and heritage values and approaches to economic sustainability, waste management and literary and political representations of islandness, island geographies are revealed less categorical, more entangled, and less bounded than they might seem from the limitations of continental perspectives. Island Geographies invites rethinking much that is taken-for-granted-and in the process often claimed or taken by those empowered by continental discourses. Book Review by Richard Howitt, Macquarie University, Australia in Geographical Research (2018, 56(2), 241-245)


The manner in which the Editor has worked to link structure to the coherence of analysis is one of the outstanding features of this neatly presented book... A bibliography that supplements all 10 chapters and which is impressive in its coherence and scope...The penultimate chapter adds a reaffirming endnote to the discussions that had preceded this point in the cumulative narrative. Readers who are aspiring researchers in these overlapping fields of geographical enquiry can take inspiration from this conversation. Keith Jackson (2019): Islands, maps, conflicts: the recurring relevance of physical geography in the Asia Pacific, Asia Pacific Business Review, DOI: 10.1080/13602381.2019.1686244 In Island Geographies, an impressive and diverse collection of essays, and a terrific, but singular conversation, considers the contemporary implications and challenges the dominance of continental discourse... Island Geographies calls into question the very processes by which we imagine things to bound into an impermeable category when they are entangled in mobile, changeable, and relational settings...This collection draws its readers away from the dominant paradigm of continental thinking; it draws us away from thinking of islands as simplistically insular-as small spaces of isolation. Instead, through discussion of the complexities of deep sea mining, climate change and management of environmental, cultural and heritage values and approaches to economic sustainability, waste management and literary and political representations of islandness, island geographies are revealed less categorical, more entangled, and less bounded than they might seem from the limitations of continental perspectives. Island Geographies invites rethinking much that is taken-for-granted-and in the process often claimed or taken by those empowered by continental discourses. Book Review by Richard Howitt, Macquarie University, Australia in Geographical Research (2018, 56(2), 241-245)


Author Information

Elaine Stratford works at the University of Tasmania, Australia, where she is a research professor at the Institute for the Study of Social Change, adjunct professorial fellow with the Peter Underwood Centre for Educational Attainment, and an affiliate of the Discipline of Geography and Spatial Sciences in the School of Technology, Environment and Design.

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