TY - JOUR AU1 - Jackson, Peter AB - Social & Cultural Geography, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2000 Peter Jackson Department of Geography, University of Shef eld, Shef eld S10 2TN, UK The recent history of social and cultural ge- across the social sciences, they have not been ography has been characterized by a series of without their critics. Earlier warnings of a ‘de- sometimes heated exchanges between different scent into discourse’ (Palmer 1990) were sup- schools of thought, often couched in terms of a plemented by more sympathetic critiques, contrast between the ‘old’ and the ‘new’ (Kong including Andrew Sayer’s (1994) reminder of 1997; Price and Lewis 1993). While such debate the continuing salience of ‘the economic’, even might be taken as evidence of the vitality of the as the economic and the cultural have been eld, it can lead to an over-simpli ed view of brought into closer dialogue (Sayer 1997). Don intellectual history, denying the signi cance of Mitchell (1995) wrote of the dangers of reifying historical continuities, exaggerating the coher- culture, while Nicky Gregson warned that so- ence of different ‘schools’ of thought and en- cial geography’s recent obsession with mean- couraging hostile caricature rather than ing, identity, representation and ideology was accurate characterization TI - Rematerializing social and cultural geography JF - Social & Cultural Geography DO - 10.1080/14649369950133449 DA - 2000-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/taylor-francis/rematerializing-social-and-cultural-geography-E2oRLQSigF SP - 9 EP - 14 VL - 1 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -