Spatial turn

Spatial turn is an intellectual movement that places emphasis on place and space in social science and the humanities.[1] It is closely linked with quantitative studies of history, literature, cartography, and other studies of society. The movement has been influential in providing mass amounts of data for study of cultures, regions, and specific locations.[2]

History

Academics such as Ernst Cassirer and Lewis Mumford helped to define a sense of "community" and "commons" in their studies, forming the first part of a "spatial turn."[1] The turn developed more comprehensively in the later twentieth century in French academic theories, such as those of Michel Foucault.[1]

Technologies have also played an important role in "turns." The introduction of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) has also been instrumental in quantifying data in the humanities for study by its place.[2]

gollark: Seems like it, thanks.
gollark: Duckduckgoing it just shows IRC logs mentioning it.
gollark: Does anyone know where the code of ForumUpdaterBot is? I want to bidirectionally bridge certain nimforum threads (on a selfhosted instance) to IRC and thought its code might be a good base.
gollark: Ah, that seems to work, it was being weird since the message didn't contain anything but the image I think.
gollark: I'm running an instance of nimforum for reasons, is there a way to embed external images?

References

  1. Guldi, Jo (2011). "What is the Spatial Turn?". Scholars Lab - University of Virginia Library. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  2. Cordulack, Evan (17 October 2011). "What is the "Spatial Turn"? A Beginner's Look". College of William and Mary. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
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