In this first episode, you will learn who Doreen Massey was and get a sneak peek at her politics. We’ll hear from Massey’s former collaborators, friends and colleagues. And from Massey herself.For nearly three decades, Massey was a professor at The Open University and “loved every minute of it”. The OU’s aim has been to literally open up access to higher education for a wider variety of people. Our approach with this podcast is similar: you don’t need to come prepared – and you certainly don’t need an academic degree to listen to it. Knowledge and politics can be produced in a wide variety of places. What intellectual spaces have you encountered or actively created beyond the classroom? Please use this form to share your reflections with us.Episode Credits Host: Agata LisiakGuests: John Allen, Ash Amin, David Featherstone, Yasmin Gunaratnam, Tariq Jazeel, Linda McDowell, Tracey Skelton, Hilary Wainwright Also Featured: Doreen MasseyWriter and Producer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Reece CoxProduction Assistant: Adèle MartinMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoSpecial Thanks: The Open University, Michael Chanan In partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review.Doreen Massey’s essays and interviews quoted in this episode:Doreen Massey speaking about London, extract from Secret City, dir. Michael Chanan, 2012 “I feel as if I've been able to reinvent myself” – a biographical interview with Doreen Massey, by Tim Freytag and Michael Hoyler, Department of Geography, University of Heidelberg, 1998 Understanding cities – Doreen Massey interviewed by Bob Catterall, City, 2000 Space, Place, and Politics – opening remarks, The Open University, 2009 The Possibilities of a Politics of Place Beyond Place? A Conversation with Doreen Massey, Human Geography Research Group, Sophie Bond, David Featherstone, Scottish Geographical Journal, 2009 Liverpool's football activists are part of a wider social movement, The Guardian, 2010 Selected tributes and obituaries:Hilary Wainwright, “How we will miss that chuckle”: my friend, Doreen Massey Jeremy Gilbert and Jo Littler, The Doreen Massey we knew Emma Jackson, Keeping one eye on the bus: A tribute to Doreen MasseyDavid Featherstone, Doreen Massey obituary
Erschienen: 28.10.2022
Dauer: 00:29:32
Spatial Delight is a podcast about the politics of space inspired by the life and work of British geographer Doreen Massey. Over the course of ten episodes (eight in English, two in Spanish), we engage with Massey’s enduring concepts – a global sense of place, geometries of power, space invaders, geographies of responsibility, and more – to challenge the way we think about the world today. As we travel from a London laundromat to a public park in Berlin, and invite listeners to take a closer look at a contested waterfront in Kochi and the Egyptian desert, we learn that “the way we are, and the way places are, is a product of our interrelations with everywhere else,” as Massey put it. Created by Agata Lisiak, Associate Professor of Migration Studies at Bard College Berlin, Spatial Delight seeks to inspire listeners to think about space and place as full of power, and to imagine political alternatives to the current world order.Episode Credits Host: Agata LisiakFeatured Guests: John Allen, Yasmin GunaratnamAlso Featured: Doreen MasseyWriter and Producer: Agata LisiakSenior Editor: Susan Stone Sound Producer: Reece CoxProduction Assistant: Adèle MartinMusic: Studio RArtwork: Bose SarmientoSpecial Thanks to: Serpentine Gallery, Michael ChananIn partnership with: The Sociological Review FoundationFunded by: Volkswagen FoundationFind more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review.
Erschienen: 21.09.2022
Dauer: 00:01:38
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