
doi: 10.1068/a3652
handle: 1959.7/uws:40719 , 1885/87521
In this paper we address the question of ‘what next after poststructuralism’ through a reassessment of area studies. In a narrative of our own involvement with place-oriented research and institutions, we examine the traditional position of area studies in geography and anthropology and its reevaluation by poststructuralist scholars in a number of disciplines. We argue that both prestructuralist and poststructuralist treatments of areas are oriented by a narrative of capitalist development; at the same time, we recognize that traditional area studies has a deep interest in noncapitalist economic practices and relations. It is therefore a resource for those of us who want to create a discourse of economic diversity as a contribution to a politics of economic innovation. The latter half of the paper presents an extended example of reading for economic difference drawn from fieldwork in the oil-palm sector in Papua New Guinea. We conclude with a ‘post-poststructuralist’ reflection on geographic field research. From our evolving perspective, the fieldwork practices that are the principal research methods of area studies constitute a relatively untheorized form of academic politics, creating differences in thought (and thus in the world) via new interpenetrations of concepts and ‘matter’.
poststructuralism, economic geography, research, 390, geographical research, Elaeis, 910, theoretical study, fieldwork, Papua New Guinea, XXXXXX - Unknown, anthropology, capitalism, Keywords: anthropology
poststructuralism, economic geography, research, 390, geographical research, Elaeis, 910, theoretical study, fieldwork, Papua New Guinea, XXXXXX - Unknown, anthropology, capitalism, Keywords: anthropology
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