This book critically interrogates the work of David Harvey, one of the world's most influential geographers, and one of its best known Marxists.
This book critically interrogates the work of David Harvey, one of the world's most influential geographers, and one of its best known Marxists.
Notes on Contributors vii
1 Introduction: Troubling Geographies 1
Derek Gregory
2 Between Deduction and Dialectics: David Harvey on Knowledge
26
Trevor Barnes
3 David Harvey and Marxism 47
Alex Callinicos
4 Dialectical Materialism: Stranger than Friction 55
Marcus Doel
5 Differences that Matter 80
Melissa Wright
6 David Harvey on Cities 102
Sharon Zukin
7 David Harvey and Dialectical Space- time 121
Eric Sheppard
8 Spatial Fixes, Temporal Fixes and Spatio- Temporal Fixes
142
Bob Jessop
9 Globalization and Primitive Accumulation: The Contributions of
David Harvey’s Dialectical Marxism 167
Nancy Hartsock
10 Towards a New Earth and a New Humanity: Nature, Ontology,
Politics 191
Bruce Braun
11 David Harvey: A Rock in a Hard Place 223
Nigel Thrift
12 Messing with ‘the Project’ 234
Cindi Katz
13 The Detour of Critical Theory 247
Noel Castree
14 Space as a Keyword 270
David Harvey
David Harvey: List of Publications 295
Bibliography 303
Index 318
Noel Castree is a Professor in the School of Environment and Development at Manchester University. His previous publications include Nature: The Adventures of an Idea (2005), Spaces of Work (2004), Social Nature (Blackwell Publishing, 2001) and Remaking Reality (1998).
Derek Gregory is a Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of British Columbia. His previous publications include The Colonial Present (Blackwell Publishing, 2004) and Geographical Imaginations (Blackwell Publishing, 1995).
"The debates in David Harvey: A Critical Reader highlight the
importance of thinking about space as something materially produced
and in process ... The discussion also leads to considerations of
the urban as a way of life. The tension between these two strands
makes this anthology fertile ground for attempts at a
synthesis."
Radical Philosophy
"David Harvey: A Critical Reader is a landmark assessment of the
work, and diverse influences, of this leading geographer-cum-social
theorist. No stodgy hagiography, the Reader presents a series of
punchy, personal, political, and often profound reflections on four
decades of Harvey’s contributions. In locating Harvey and his
interlocutors, the Reader also suggestively maps out the shifting
terrain of critical thinking around the spatialities of late
capitalism." Jamie Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison
"Few contemporary thinkers have been untouched by David Harvey,
even in opposition, as this collection of brilliant essays attests.
And, after the critics’ scalpels have done their bit of nip and
tuck, he comes off still looking rather well for his age." R. A.
Walker, University of California, Berkeley
"The Critical Reader offers a set of inspiring and non-hagiographic
reflections on the intellectual legacy of David Harvey that will be
an invaluable read not only for geographers but for all social
scientists committed to the pursuit of a critical and
transformative understanding of the world."
Ugo Rossi, Universita L’Orientale of Naples, Italy
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |