Description

Book Synopsis
This book is about the formation and development of Latin America as name, idea and concept, as well as the wider concepts of location, knowledge and the relationship between them. Latin America is not only a subject or an academic construct, it is also a perspective from which subjectivities are established, knowledge is developed and narratives are produced. This study argues that epistemology cannot exist in abstract terms, despite traditional academic arguments to the contrary. Therefore the author uses ‘Latin America’ to anchor his more general arguments in a particular location and calls this approach ‘geo-epistemology’.
The author discusses how the specificity of a particular location can contribute to the establishment of both a method of formulating human knowledge and the boundaries of what can be known. The text explores the relationship between philosophy, geography and geometry, and analyses the notions of science, empire and colonialism. In response to the contemporary debate on ‘space of thinking’, the author proposes a new concept of ‘reversal thinking’, which leads to an examination of the roles of language and writing from an epistemic point of view.

Table of Contents
Contents: Spatial Thinking and Foreignness – Geography and Philosophy – Space, Geometry and the Colonies – Science ad Empire – Language, Knowledge and horizon d’attente – Reversal Thinking – The Wasted Land.

Geo-epistemology: Latin America and the Location

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    A Paperback / softback by Claudio Canaparo, Claudio Canaparo

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      Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
      Publication Date: 20/11/2009
      ISBN13: 9783039115730, 978-3039115730
      ISBN10: 3039115731

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book is about the formation and development of Latin America as name, idea and concept, as well as the wider concepts of location, knowledge and the relationship between them. Latin America is not only a subject or an academic construct, it is also a perspective from which subjectivities are established, knowledge is developed and narratives are produced. This study argues that epistemology cannot exist in abstract terms, despite traditional academic arguments to the contrary. Therefore the author uses ‘Latin America’ to anchor his more general arguments in a particular location and calls this approach ‘geo-epistemology’.
      The author discusses how the specificity of a particular location can contribute to the establishment of both a method of formulating human knowledge and the boundaries of what can be known. The text explores the relationship between philosophy, geography and geometry, and analyses the notions of science, empire and colonialism. In response to the contemporary debate on ‘space of thinking’, the author proposes a new concept of ‘reversal thinking’, which leads to an examination of the roles of language and writing from an epistemic point of view.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Spatial Thinking and Foreignness – Geography and Philosophy – Space, Geometry and the Colonies – Science ad Empire – Language, Knowledge and horizon d’attente – Reversal Thinking – The Wasted Land.

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