projects through which hegemonic perceptions and imperatives find their way
into governance at all scales.
The academic ideas of the age tend to be closely related to those of the most
powerful groups. So it is not surprising that ‘Post Cultural Turn Geography’ has
generously partaken of, and sometimes added a few tweaks to, these classic
Imperial practices. In parallel with the global projection of neo-liberalism and
rise to unchallenged hegemony of the United States, a combination of postmod-
ernism and post-structuralism became the cuckoo in the official intellectual
nest (Callinicos 1999: 297). Anglo-American human geography was one of the
most thorough and lasting conquests (Soja 1989). The post-modern element
now looks more than a shade old fashioned, neo-modernist grand narratives
being louder and more monolithic than ever (notably that there are no alterna-
tives to neo-liberal economics and US-style ‘liberal democracy’). But its post-
structuralist cognitive and normative foundations live on the prevailing dominant
academic (and non-academic) orthodoxy in the West (and increasingly elsewhere).
They have licensed an evolving sequence of post-post-modern discourses
from Actor Network Theory, Relationality, to non-representational ‘theory’, and
beyond.
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