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Innovations in the afterlife of the Cold War: German-language human geography
Authors:Matthew G Hannah
Affiliation:1. Universit?t Bayreuth, Fakult?t II, Universit?tsstrasse 30, 95440Bayreuth, Germanymuddhunnuh@gmail.com
Abstract:This commentary will coalesce around two main points. First, the articles by Markus Hesse on urban geography, by Annika Mattissek and Georg Glasze on recent developments in discourse-analytic approaches, and by Ulrich Best on the genealogy of radical–Marxist or critical German-language geography all support the contention that key features of Germanophone human geography still mark it out as a ‘Cold War’ human geography. As will become clear, this contention goes well beyond noting the marginality (until recently) of radical–Marxist positions (Belina, B., Best, U., & Naumann, M. (2009). Critical geography in Germany: From exclusion to inclusion via internationalization. Social Geography, 4, 47–58). Second, I will argue that although this configuration has had real costs, including both analytic and ‘civic’ deficits, it has also allowed the development of distinctive strengths and innovative emphases in human geographic research that can and should be engaged by other sub-communities in the international discourse.
Keywords:German-language geography  geography of knowledge  Cold War
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