Open Access highlight papers

The following papers have been chosen as ‘highlights’, and are available open access in order to provide a sense, for nonsubscribers, of the papers published in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space.

Differences: chaos in the history of the sciences 30(2) 3692 – 380
M Serres

Psychotopologies: closing the circuit between psychic and material space 29(6) 10302 – 1047
V Blum, A Secor

The surprising detritus of leisure: encountering the Late Photography of War 29(5) 8732 – 890
D Lisle

Bare life: border-crossing deaths and spaces of moral alibi 29(4) 5992 – 612
R L Doty

Atmospheric attunements 29(3) 4452 – 453
K Stewart

“Protest is just a click away!” Responses to the 2003 Iraq War on a bulletin board system in China 29(1) 1312 – 149
C Y Woon

Goatsucker: toward a spatial theory of state secrecy 28(5) 7592 – 771
T Paglen

I am also of the opinion that materialism must be destroyed 28(5) 7722 – 790
G Harman

Entering a risky territory: space in the age of digital navigation 28(4) 5812 – 599
V November, E Camacho-Hübner, B Latour

Splintering spheres of security: Peter Sloterdijk and the contemporary fortress city 28(2) 3262 – 340
F R Klauser

Mobilities, meetings, and futures: an interview with John Urry 28(1) 12 – 16
P Adey, D Bissell

Bestiality and the queering of the human animal 28(1) 1582 – 177
M Brown, C Rasmussen

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6 Responses to Open Access highlight papers

  1. stuartelden says:

    Reblogged this on Progressive Geographies and commented:

    Open Access papers from Society and Space – Serres; Harman; Paglen; November, Camacho-Hübner & Latour; Doty, Adey & Bissell, Klauser, Blum & Secor, Woon, Brown & Rasmussen, Lisle…

  2. Pingback: Open Access highlight papers « Society and Space – Environment and Planning D « PHILOSOPHY IN A TIME OF ERROR

  3. Pingback: more open access articles from Society and Space « Object-Oriented Philosophy

  4. Pingback: Bodies in Movement on November, Camacho-Hübner and Latour « Society and Space – Environment and Planning D

  5. PlastiCités says:

    Reblogged this on occursus and commented:
    Open access papers from a brilliant journal

  6. Pingback: Trevor Paglen – The Last Pictures | Progressive Geographies

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