Abstract

At a time when the environmental problem is becoming one of the major political and socio-economic issues, geography seems to face difficulties in approaching the subject. Although the study of society-nature interactions was the very foundation on which geography built itself as an academic discipline at the end of the previous century, today’s geographical work reveals a deep gap in the representations of physical and human processes. We shall discuss the historical production of this gap through an explanation of the rise of modern sciences and a brief history of geographical approaches of nature. In doing so, the paper tries to draw attention to the major concepts that could help combining physical and human geographies in a new and more promising manner. Using ‘political ecology’ and ‘historical materialism’, we shall demonstrate how society and nature can be seen as dialectically linked to each other, and how geography is able to analyse the socio-ecological processes that shape the ‘world’. This analysis merges together space, society and nature in a single framework without falling into the earlier dualist perspectives (i.e. determinism and possibilism).

Highlights

  • We shall briefly recapitulate the historical representations of nature as it developed in geography in order to draw attention to the major concepts that can still be valuably used today

  • 23 The human/environment relationship has been scripted into the core of geography from its inception as an academic discipline in the late 19th century

  • Space remains central to the analysis, understanding and politics associated with environmental changes and with the imagining and scripting of possible alternative worlds and environments

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Summary

Pierre Cornut and Erik Swyngedouw

ISSN: 2294-9135 Publisher: National Committee of Geography of Belgium, Société Royale Belge de Géographie Printed version Date of publication: 30 December 2000 Number of pages: 37-46 ISSN: 1377-2368. Electronic reference Pierre Cornut and Erik Swyngedouw, « Approaching the society-nature dialectic : a plea for a geographical study of the environment », Belgeo [Online], 1-2-3-4 | 2000, Online since 12 July 2015, connection on 10 December 2020. This text was automatically generated on 10 December 2020. Belgeo est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International. Approaching the society-nature dialectic : a plea for a geographical study of

Hybrid worlds
Conclusion

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