Neil Smith, 1954-2012

geografia Radical, Geógrafo Marxista, Geógrafo Revolucionário

Autores

  • Don Mitchell Universidade de Siracusa
  • Paulo Roberto de Albuquerque Bomfim Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia de São Paulo – IFSP
  • Clarissa Cavalcante Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia do Pará - IFPA
  • Rosana de Campos Fernandes Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia de São Paulo – IFSP

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35699/2237-549X.2021.34402

Resumo

Tradução do "longo obtuário" de Neil Smith, escrito por Don Mitchell

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Biografia do Autor

Don Mitchell, Universidade de Siracusa

Departamento de Geografia, Universidade de Siracusa / Universidade de Nova York

Referências

Checkovich, A. (2005) Review of American Empire, Isis 96, 455-56.

Cloke, P., May, J., and Johnsen, S. (2010) Swept Up Lives? Re-envisioning the Homeless City. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.

Cooke, P. (1985) “Class Practices as Regional Markers: A Contribution to Labour Geography,” in D. Gregory and J. Urry (eds.), Social Relations and Spatial Structures. London: MacMillan.

Crysler, G. (2003) Writing Spaces: Discourses of Architecture, Urbanism, and the Built Environment, 1960-2000. New York: Routledge.

Darling, E. (2012) “Neil Smith 1954-2012,” Dialectical Anthropology, on line DOI 10.1007/s10624-012-9285-7.

Dobson, J. (2012) “Karen Morin’s Gendered ‘Geography’,” Geographical Review 102, 541-43.

Gilmore, R. (1994) “Capital, State and the Spatial Fix: Imprisoning the Crisis at Pelican Bay,” unpublished paper, Department of Geography, Rutgers University.

Glick, T. (1983) “In Search of Geography,” Isis 74, 92-97.

Godlewska, A. and Smith, N. (eds.) (1994) Geography and Empire: Critical Studies in the History of Geography. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Hartshorne, R. (1961 ed.) The Nature of Geography: A Critical Survey of Current Thought in Light of the Past. Lancaster, PA: Association of American Geographers.

Harstock, N. and Smith, N. (1979/80) “On Althusser’s Misreading of the 1857 Introduction,” Science and Society 43, 486-89.

Harvey, D. (1969) Explanation in Geography. London: Edward Arnold.

Harvey, D. (1983) “Owen Lattimore: A Memoire,” Antipode 15 (3), 1-11.

Harvey, D. (1984) “On the History and Present Condition of Geography: A Historical Materialist Manifesto,” Professional Geographer 36, 1-11.

Harvey, D. (2012) Remembrance in D. Cowen et al “Neil Smith: A Critical Geographer,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30, 947-62.

Herod, A. (1991) “The Production of Scale in United States Labour Relations,” Area 23, 82-88.

Herod, A. (1992) Workers as Geographers: The Production of Space in the East Coast Longshore Industry Since 1955, PhD dissertation, Department of Geography, Rutgers University.

Herod, A. (2001) Labor Geographies: Workers and the Landscapes of Capitalism. New York: Guilford.

Herod, A. (2005) Review of American Empire, Area 37, 457-58.

Hoyt, H. (1933) One Hundred Years of Land Values in Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

James, C.L.R. (1993) Beyond a Boundary Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Katz, C. (1991) “A Cable to Cross a Curse,” unpublished paper.

Katz, C. (1998” “Lost and Found in the Posts: Addressing Critical Human Geography,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 16, 257-78.

Kuhn, T. (1962) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Lees, L., Slater, T. and Wyly, E. (2008) Gentrification. London: Routledge.

Lees, L., Slater, T., and Wyly, E. (eds.) (2010) The Gentrification Reader. London: Routledge.

Lefebvre, H. (1976), The Survival of Capitalism. New York: Schocken Books.

Leiss, W. (1974). The Domination of Nature. Boston: Beacon Press.

Martin, G. (1980), The Life and Thought of Isaiah Bowman. Hamden, CT: Shoe String Press.

Porter, M. (2002) “Lost in the Shadows: the History of the Columbia University Geography Department,” unpublished paper, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Pratt, G. (2004) “Editor’s Announcement,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 22, 1-2.

Rameau, M. (2012) Remembrance in D. Cowen et al “Neil Smith: A Critical Geographer,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 30, 947-62.

Schaefer, F. (1953) “Exceptionalism in Geography: A Methodological Examination,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 43, 226-45.

Schaffer, R. and Smith, N. (1986) “The Gentrification of Harlem?” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 76, 347-65.

Schmidt, A. (1971) The Concept of Nature in Marx. London: New Left Books.

Slater, T. (2012) “Rose Street and Revolution: A Tribute to Neil Smith, 1954-2012,” available at: http://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/homes/tslater/tributetoNeilSmith.html

Smith, N. (1977a) The Return from the Suburbs and the Structuring of Urban Space: State Involvement in Society Hill, Philadelphia, Undergraduate Dissertation, Department of Geography, St. Andrews University.

Smith, N. (1977b) “Symbol, Space and the Bicentennial,” Antipode 9(2), 76-83.

Smith, N. (1979a) “Gentrification and Capital: Theory, Practice and Ideology in Society Hill,” Antipode 11(3), 24-35.

Smith, N. (1979b) “Geography, Science and Post-Postivist Modes of Explanation,” Progress in Human Geography 3, 356-83.

Smith, N. (1979c) “Toward a Theory of Gentrification: A Back to the City Movement by Capital not People,” Journal of the American Planning Association 45, 538-48.

Smith, N. (1980) “Symptomatic Silence in Althusser: The Concept of Nature and Unity of Science,” Science and Society 44, 53-81.

Smith, N. (1982a) “Gentrification and Uneven Development,” Economic Geography 58, 139-55.

Smith, N. (1982b) “Theories of Underdevelopment,” Professional Geographer 34, 332-37.

Smith, N. (1982c) Uneven Development: The Production of Nature under Capitalism, PhD Dissertation, Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering, Johns Hopkins University

Smith, N (1984a) “Deindustrialization and Regionalization,” Papers of the Regional Science Association 54, 113-28.

Smith, N. (1984b) “Isaiah Bowman: Political Geography and Geopolitics,” Political Geography Quarterly 3, 69-76.

Smith, N. (1984c) Uneven Development: Nature, Capital, and the Production of Space. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.

Smith, N (1986a) “Bowman’s New World and the Council on Foreign Relations,” Geographical Review 76, 438-60.

Smith, N. (1986b) “On the Necessity of Uneven Development,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 9, 87-104.

Smith, N. (1986c) “The ESRS Changing Urban and Regional Systems Initiative,” Environment and Planning A 18, 995-96.

Smith, N. (1986d) “Uneven Development and the Geography of Modernity,” Social Concept 4, 67-90.

Smith, N. (1987a) “‘Academic War Over the Field of Geography’: The Elimination of Geography at Harvard,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 77, 155-72.

Smith, N. (1987b) “Dangers of the Empirical Turn: Some Comments on the CURS Initiative,” Antipode 19, 59-68.

Smith, N. (1987c) “Gentrification and the Rent Gap,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 77, 462-65.

Smith, N. (1987d) “Of Yuppies and Housing: Gentrification, Social Restructuring and the Urban Dream,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 5, 151-72.

Smith, N. (1987e) “Rascal Concepts, Minimalizing Discourse and the Politics of Geography,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 5, 377-83.

Smith, N. (1987f) “Rehabilitating a Renegade: The Geography and Politics of Karl August Wittfogel,” Dialectical Anthropology 12, 127-36.

Smith, N. (1988a) “For a History of Geography,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 78, 159-63.

Smith, N. (1988b) “Regional Adjustment or Restructuring?” Urban Geography 9, 318-24.

Smith, N. (1988c) “The Region is Dead! Long Live the Region!” Political Geography Quarterly 7, 141-52.

Smith, N. (1988d) “The Short American Century,” Studies in Comparative International Development 23, 38-46.

Smith, N. (1989a) “Expertease: Making M/other Nature,” Artforum 28 (4), 17-18.

Smith, N. (1989b) “Geography as Museum: Conservative Idealism in ‘The Nature of Geography,’” in J.N. Entrikin and S. Brunn (eds.) Reflections on Richard Hartshorne’s “The Nature of Geography”, Occasional Papers of the Association of American Geographers, 89-120.

Smith, N. (1989c) “Tompkins Square: Riots, Rents, and Redskins,” Portable Lower East Side 6, 1-36.

Smith, N. (1990a) “Tompkins Square Park Timeline,” in New York City Tableaux: Tompkins Square. New York: Exit Art, 14-20.

Smith, N. (1990b), Uneven Development: Nature, Capital, and the Production of Space (2nd edn.). Oxford: Blackwell.

Smith, N. (1991a) “Housing: Gentrification, Dislocation and Fighting Back,” in B. Wallis (ed.), If You Lived Here: The City in Art, Theory and Social Activism – A Project by Martha Rosler. Seattle: Bay Press, 108-114.

Smith, N. (1991b) “What’s Left? A Lot’s Left,” Antipode 23, 406-418.

Smith, N. (1992a) “Contours of a Spatialized Politics: Homeless Vehicles and the Production of Geographical Scale,” Social Text 33, 54-81.

Smith, N. (1992b) “New City, New Frontier: The Lower East Side as Wild West,” in Michael Sorkin (ed.), Variation on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space. New York: Hill and Wang, 61-93.

Smith, N. (1992c) “Real Wars, Theory Wars,” Progress in Human Geography 16, 257-71.

Smith, N. (1993) “Homeless/Global: Scaling Places,” in J. Bird et al (eds.), Mapping the Futures: Local Cultures, Global Change. London: Routledge, 87-119.

Smith, N. (1994) “Geography, Empire and Social Theory,” Progress in Human Geography 18, 491-500.

Smith, N. (1995a) “Gentrifying Theory,” Scottish Geographical Magazine 111, 124-36.

Smith, N. (1995b) “Trespassing the Future,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 13, 505-6.

Smith, N (1996a) “After Tompkins Square Park: Degentrification and the Revanchist City,” in A. King (ed.), Re-Presenting the City: Ethnicity, Capital and Culture in the 21st Century Metropolis. London: Macmillan, 93-107.

Smith, N (1996b) “Rethinking Sleep,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 14, 505-6.

Smith, N. (1996c) “Social Justice and the New Urbanism: The Revanchist City,” in E. Swyngedouw and A. Merrifield (eds.), The Urbanization of Injustice. London: Lawrence and Wishart, 117-36.

Smith, N. (1996d) “Space of Vulnerability: The Space of Flows and the Politics of Scale,” Critique of Anthropology 16, 63-77.

Smith, N. (1996e) The New Urban Frontier: Gentrification and the Revanchist City. New York: Routledge.

Smith, N. (1996f) “The Production of Nature,” in G. Robertson and M. Mash (eds.), FutureNatural. London: Routledge, 35-54.

Smith, N. (1996g) “The Revanchist City – New York’s Homeless Wars,” Polygraph 8, 44-63.

Smith, N. (1997) “The Satanic Geographies of Globalization: Uneven Development in the 1990s,” Public Culture 10 (1), 169-89.

Smith, N. (1998a) “El Niño Capitalism,” Progress in Human Geography 22, 159-63.

Smith, N. (1998b) “Giuliani Time,” Social Text 57, 1-20.

Smith, N. (2000b) “What Happened to Class?” Environment and Planning A 32, 1011-32.

Smith, N. (2000c) “Who Rules This Sausage Factory?” Antipode 32, 330-39.

Smith, N. (2001a) “Ashes and Aftermath,” The Arab World Geographer 4, 81-84.

Smith, N. (2001b) “Scales of Terror and the Resort to Geography: September 11, October 7,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 19, 631-37.

Smith, N. (2002a) “Ashes and Aftermath,” Philosophy & Geography 5, 9-12.

Smith, N. (2002b) “Ashes and Aftermath,” Studies in Political Economy 67, 7-12.

Smith, N. (2002c) “Scales of Terror: The Manufacturing of Nationalism and the War for US Globalism,” in S. Zukin and M. Sorkin (eds.), After the World Trade Center. New York: Routledge, 97-108.

Smith, N. (2003) American Empire: Roosevelt’s Geographer and the Prelude to Globalization. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Smith, N. (2005a) “Geographers, Empires and Victims: A Response,” Political Geography 24, 263-66.

Smith, N. (2005b) “Neo-Critical Geography, Or, The Flat Pluralist World of Business Class,” Antipode 37, 887-99.

Smith, N. (2005c) “The Bush Hurricane,” Clarion, October, 9.

Smith, N. (2005d) The Endgame of Globalization. New York: Routledge.

Smith, N. (2005e) “There’s No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster” (http://understandingkatrina.ssrc.org/Smith/)

Smith, N. (2005f) “There’s No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster,” Designer/Builder, November/December 33-35.

Smith, N. (2006a) “Nature as Accumulation Strategy,” Socialist Register 43, 16-36.

Smith, N. (2006b) “On Liberalism: A Response,” Political Geography 25, 37-41.

Smith, N. (2006c) “The Endgame of Globalization,” Political Geography 25, 1-14.

Smith, N. (2007) “Disastrous Accumulation,” South Atlantic Quarterly 106, 769-87.

Smith, N. (2008a) “Comment: Neo-liberalism – Dead but Dominant,” Focaal: European Journal of Anthropology 51, 155-57.

Smith, N. (2008b) “Neoliberalism is Dead, Dominant, Defeatable – then What?” Human Geography 1 (2),

Smith, N. (2008c) “Zur Kapitalistischen Produktion von Natur,” Das Argument 279, 873-78.

Smith, N. (2010) “The Revolutionary Imperative,” Antipode 41 (s.1), 50-65.

Smith, N. (2011) “Uneven Development Redux,” New Political Economy 16, 261-65.

Smith, N. and Cowen, D. (2010) “Martial Law in the Streets of Toronto: G20, Security and State Violence,” Human Geography, 3 (3), 29-46.

Smith, N. and Desbiens, C. (1999) “The International Critical Geography Group: Forbidden Optimism,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 17, 379-82.

Smith, N. and Dennis, W. (1987) “The Restructuring of Geographical Scale: The Coalescence and Fragmentation of the Northern Core Region,” Economic Geography 63, 160-82.

Smith, N. and Katz, C. (1992) “LA Intifada: Interview with Mike Davis,” Social Text 33, 19-33.

Smith, N. and Katz, C. (1993) “Grounding Metaphor: Towards a Spatialized Politics,” in M. Keith and S. Pile (eds.) Place and the Politics of Identity. London: Routledge, 67-83.

Downloads

Publicado

2021-07-02 — Atualizado em 2022-04-15

Versões

Como Citar

Mitchell, D., Bomfim, P. R. de A., Cavalcante, C. M., & Fernandes, R. de C. (2022). Neil Smith, 1954-2012: geografia Radical, Geógrafo Marxista, Geógrafo Revolucionário. Revista Geografias, 17(1), 145–194. https://doi.org/10.35699/2237-549X.2021.34402 (Original work published 2º de julho de 2021)

Edição

Seção

Dossiê de traduções: Neil Smith e a história da Geografia anglo-saxã