472
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Double Symposium (David Harvey: a double symposium)

Beautiful impossibility: a fifty-year retrospective on Social Justice and the City and David Harvey’s – and geography’s – journey into Marxism

Pages 363-372 | Received 07 Jul 2023, Accepted 29 Sep 2023, Published online: 11 Oct 2023

References

  • Barnes, T., & Sheppard, E. (2019). Baltimore as truth spot: David Harvey, Johns Hopkins, and urban activism. In T. Barnes, & E. Sheppard (Eds.), Spatial histories of radical geography: North America and beyond (pp. 183–209). Blackwell.
  • Castree, N., Charnock, G., & Christophers, B. (2023). David Harvey: A critical introduction to his thought. Routledge.
  • Harvey, D. (1969). Explanation in geography. Edward Arnold.
  • Harvey, D. (1974). Population, resources, and the ideology of science. Economic Geography, 50(3), 256–277. https://doi.org/10.2307/142863
  • Harvey, D. (1979). Monument and myth. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 69, 362–381.
  • Harvey, D. (1982). Limits to capital. Blackwell.
  • Harvey, D. (1984). On the history and present condition of geography: An historical-materialist manifesto. The Professional Geographer, 36(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0033-0124.1984.00001.x
  • Harvey, D. (1985a). Consciousness and the urban experience. Blackwell.
  • Harvey, D. (1985b). The urbanization of capital. Blackwell.
  • Harvey, D. (1989). The condition of postmodernity. Blackwell.
  • Harvey, D. (1996). Justice, nature, and the geography of difference. Blackwell.
  • Harvey, D. (2000). Spaces of hope. University of Edinburgh Press.
  • Harvey, D. (2009 [1973]). Social justice and the city (Revised edition). University of Georgia Press.
  • Mitchell, D. (2023). Total critique: The Condition of Postmodernity at the end of history. In K. Freeman, & J. Monroe (Eds.), Reading the new global order: Textual transformations of 1989 (pp. 59–78). Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Paterson, J. (1984). David Harvey’s geography. Croom Helm.