Spatial Ecologies takes a new look at the spatial turn in French
cultural and critical theory since 1968. Verena Andermatt Conley
examines how Henri Lefebvre, Michel de Certeau, Jean Baudrillard, Marc
Augé, Paul Virilio, Bruno Latour and Etienne Balibar reconsider the
experience of space in the midst of considerable political and economic
turmoil. The book considers why French critical theorists turned away
from questions of time and looked instead toward questions of space. It
asks what writing about space can tell us about life in late capitalism.
Conley links this question to the problematic of habitality, taking us
back to Heidegger and showing how it informs much of French theory.
Building on the author's acclaimed earlier study Ecopolitics, Spatial
Ecologies argues, through the voices of the authors taken up the eight
chapters, for recognition of the virtue of spatial theory and its
pragmatic applications in the global milieu. It will be required reading
for scholars of
literary and cultural theory, and twentieth- and twenty-first century
French culture.