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Progress in Human Geography
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Placing ideas: genius loci, heterotopia and geography's quantitative revolution

Trevor J. Barnes

Department of Geography, 1984 West Mall, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1 Z2, Canada

The paper is concerned with understanding the geography of intellectual creativity and change using as a case study the quantitative revolution in geography. First, I review briefly the sea change occurring over the last 40 years in understanding intellectual production, and made most forcefully in the literature in the sociology of scientific knowledge. I highlight three elements: the nature and persistence of intellectual breaks and ruptures; the embodiedness and material embeddedness of the intellectual process; and the centrality of networks and alliances. Secondly, I take each of these three components of intellectual production, and work them through different theories of place to illuminate the role of the geographical within each. In particular, I argue that the geography of intellectual rupture is clarified by using Michel Foucault's notion of heterotopia, that the place of intellectual embodiment and embeddedness is elucidated by Kevin Hetherington and John Law's work on materiality, and that spaces of network and alliance are enhanced by the recent writings on place by Nigel Thrift. Finally, using these three features I present an interpretive analysis of the place of geography's quantitative revolution drawing upon 36 oral histories I conducted with firstand second-generation pioneers of that movement.

Key Words: place • quantitative revolution • science studies

Progress in Human Geography, Vol. 28, No. 5, 565-595 (2004)
DOI: 10.1191/0309132504ph506oa


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