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All Geographers Should Be Feminist Geographers: Creating Care-Full Academic Spaces

Contributor(s): Naylor, Lindsay (Author), Christopher, Emerald (With), Eaves, Latoya (With), Kinkaid, Eden (With), Faria, Caroline (With)

ISBN: 9780820374208

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

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Pub Date: November 1, 2025

LCCN: 2025019875

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.50" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 0.66 lbs) 218 pages

Series: Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Although care is a critical component of human life, it has remained on the margins of higher education and theory, heightening unequal relations along gender, race, and class lines. In All Geographers Should Be Feminist Geographers, Lindsay Naylor argues for a feminist approach in geography that is both world-dismantling and world-making, pushing back against a neoliberal academy. Care in this context is examined through labor, social reproduction, relations of exchange, and affect. Care is an everyday practice that takes place in public, private, and liminal spaces.

Naylor unpacks the promise and challenges of feminisms to address the care-less academy and the longstanding violent and exclusionary character of geography. Her fundamental premise: geography is well placed for this moment as we study and explain difference while "writing the earth." This book attends to such matters. While feminist geography has long been a subdiscipline within geography, Lindsay Naylor makes the case that a feminist approach to the academy, and geography specifically, should form the foundation of all the work we do.

Brief description: LINDSAY NAYLOR is a feminist political geographer and the author of the award-winning book Fair Trade Rebels: Coffee Production and Struggles for Autonomy in Chiapas. She is a cofacilitator of the Embodiment Lab in the Department of Geography and Spatial Sciences at the University of Delaware.

Review Quotes: This book is fascinating for all sorts of reasons, but perhaps what I did not expect--and yet which I greatly appreciate--is the sheer commitment to, enthusiasm for, and even joy in speaking about geography as a subject matter. That geography matters--and that the worldly geographies of environment, economy, politics, society, and culture are profoundly wrapped up in both lived experiences and planetary futures--is a message that comes ringing off almost every page.--Christopher Philo "professor of geography, University of Glasgow, and author of A Forbidding Fortress of Locks, Bars and Padded Cells"

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