Affiliation:
1. Sichuan University, China
2. La Trobe University, Australia
Abstract
In response to the wonderful work of the editors and contributors to this special issue, we offer some combined reflections on the importance of place to the Thesis Eleven project, broadly defined, and including the textbooks that grew out of this field. We return to the impact and influence of two major intellectual resources in the work and thinking of Bernard Smith and George Seddon. These mavericks helped us to think our own sense of place, and to engage with the other places that we encountered and also sometimes think of as home. Place here nestles with movement as central conceptual coordinates.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies