discursive understandings that make certain kinds of actions normal and others
strange. How would the ideas of neoliberal globalization become so hegemonic,
for example, without the ability of various right wing think-tanks to win the
battle for the heart and minds of society? Furthermore, it came to be recognized
that the economy consists of more than capitalist economic processes; household
labor, subsistence production, LETS, the informal economy and worker cooper-
atives. These are undertaken in distinct places, and often are central to capitalism
(reproducing its labor; cheapening labor and other inputs).
With the cultural turn, the good life is conceptualized as exceeding wealth,
accumulation and development; the goals and behaviors of economic agents are
not reducible to economic logic. Proponents share political economy’s critique
of capitalism, seeing capitalist production and exchange as facilitating rather than
mitigating socially and geographically unequal livelihood possibilities. Yet they
argue that political economy over-emphasizes economic mechanisms and their
political consequences. Two aspects of geography are seen as important; place
and networks. Socially constructed place-based practices shape context and
cultural norms, some of which come to dominate by traveling beyond their local
origins. Under actor-network theory, the networks connecting human and non-
human actants create a distinct topological geography; a contingent relational
economic geography in which scale and relative location are of diminishing
importance. It is argued that unequal livelihood possibilities are best addressed
by revalidating geographical difference; distinct local cultural imaginaries of the
good life, and alternative economic practices.
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