History,Space and Nature: Building Theory from the Exception |
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Authors: | Mazen Labban |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geography and Regional Studies , University of Miami , 1000 Memorial Dr, Ferré Bldg, Rm 219, Coral Gables, FL, 33124, United States mlabban@miami.edu |
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Abstract: | Uneven Development endeavours to derive a theory of uneven geographical development by putting in motion a ‘historical dialogue’ between Marx's critical theorisation of capitalism and the geograhical reality of capitalism at the close of the twentieth century, and by theorising the relations between material nature and the spatial dynamics of capitalist accumulation. The result, however, is a theory of uneven development predicated on a logical rather than a historical conception of capitalism, which furthermore supersedes the question of the production of nature in conceptualising the spatial dynamics of (contemporary) capitalism. This article argues for a re-theorisation of uneven geographical development that considers the production of nature, namely extractive industry, as a point of departure in theorising the spatial dynamics of contemporary capitalist accumulation, focusing briefly on the concentration and centralisation of capital. |
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Keywords: | production of space production of nature concentration and centralisation of capital uneven geographical development |
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