TY - JOUR AU - Castree, Noel AB - though you drive nature out with a pitchfork, she [sic] will still find her way back Horace, Epistles the themes of race, sexuality, gender, nation, family, and class have been written into the body of nature in western . . . sciences since the eighteenth century Haraway, Primate Visions Writing in this journal, Michael Redclift (1987a: 223) argued that “Marxist approaches to the ’production of nature’ remain a largely unexplored dimension of theoretical concern” within human geography. Eight years on, it seems to me that, in certain crucial respects, Redclift’s statement still holds. To be sure, there has been a valuable consolidation and application of the theoretical gains made up until the late 1980s regarding the production of nature thesis (Fitzsimmons, 1986; Marsden et al., 1988; Redclift, 1987a; Watts, 1989,1991).Since then, however, theoretical debate has moved on within (and outside) the wider world of Marxist scholarship. For that reason, in this paper I want to review, and to offer some general theoretical considerations about, the “production of nature” thesis within Marxist geography so as to bring debate up to date, and to point to some possible future directions for Marxist thinking about produced nature. t Department of Geography, TI - THE NATURE OF PRODUCED NATURE: MATERIALITY AND KNOWLEDGE CONSTRUCTION IN MARXISM JF - Antipode DO - 10.1111/j.1467-8330.1995.tb00260.x DA - 1995-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/wiley/the-nature-of-produced-nature-materiality-and-knowledge-construction-CN5blCF09D SP - 12 VL - 27 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -