A Tale of Three Scales: Ways of Malthusian Worldmaking
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan US
Reference95 articles.
1. The phrase “strong program” is a nod to the so-called strong program in the sociology of science developed by Barry Barnes and David Bloor. Their attention to social constructivism is one shared by scholars attending to the “historical geography of science.” Some of the work emanating from this rubric in the history of sciences and its intellectual underpinnings is canvassed in Diarmid Finnegan, “The Spatial Turn: Geographical Approaches in the History of Science,” Journal of the History of Biology 41 (2008): 369–388 and
2. Richard Powell, “Geographies of Science: Localities, Practices, Futures,” Progress in Human Geography 31 (2007): 309–327. For its broader ramification into other arenas of historical inquiry see
3. Robert J. Mayhew, “Historical Geography, 2009–2010: Geohistoriography, the Forgotten Braudel and the Place of Nominalism,” Progress in Human Geography 35 (2011): 409–421; and
4. Robert J. Mayhew, “Geography Is the Eye of Enlightenment Historiography,” Modern Intellectual History 7 (2010): 611–627.
5. Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford: Blackwells, 1991);