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2 The Feminist Geography Of Feminist Political Geography

  • Madelaine C. Cahuas , Sydney Calkin , Cordelia Freeman , Malene H. Jacobsen , Olivia Mason , Hanieh Molana , Aparna Parikh and Nokuzola Songo
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Abstract

Academic knowledge production has its own geography, politics, and power relations. Any feminist work on political geography must reflexively engage with questions about the political and geographical context in which it is made. This Handbook of Feminist Political Geography is no different. In this opening chapter we have invited short interventions from a variety of authors reflecting on the geography of knowledge production in the field and the concepts of positionality, reflexivity, and intellectual accountability. We asked contributors to reflect on the field of feminist political geography, the dynamics that shape knowledge production in that field, and the kinds of transformations they want to see therein. We invited them to reflect, too, on how feminist ideas about positionality and reflexivity shape professional practice. In what follows, feminist political geographers working on different topics and in different geographical contexts reflect on the discipline itself. Who and what is our work for? Whose knowledges do we value and how do we engage with them? How can we transform the institutions in which we work? How do we make our work meaningful outside of academic institutions and constraints? What are our responsibilities, as scholars, in the face of grave injustice?

Abstract

Academic knowledge production has its own geography, politics, and power relations. Any feminist work on political geography must reflexively engage with questions about the political and geographical context in which it is made. This Handbook of Feminist Political Geography is no different. In this opening chapter we have invited short interventions from a variety of authors reflecting on the geography of knowledge production in the field and the concepts of positionality, reflexivity, and intellectual accountability. We asked contributors to reflect on the field of feminist political geography, the dynamics that shape knowledge production in that field, and the kinds of transformations they want to see therein. We invited them to reflect, too, on how feminist ideas about positionality and reflexivity shape professional practice. In what follows, feminist political geographers working on different topics and in different geographical contexts reflect on the discipline itself. Who and what is our work for? Whose knowledges do we value and how do we engage with them? How can we transform the institutions in which we work? How do we make our work meaningful outside of academic institutions and constraints? What are our responsibilities, as scholars, in the face of grave injustice?

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