Thirding-as-othering
From Geography
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'''References''' | '''References''' | ||
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Soja, E.W. (1996). The extraordinary voyages of Henri Lefebvre; The trialectics of spatiality. In Thirdspace: Journeys to los Angeles and other real-and-imagined place. Blackwell: Oxford. | Soja, E.W. (1996). The extraordinary voyages of Henri Lefebvre; The trialectics of spatiality. In Thirdspace: Journeys to los Angeles and other real-and-imagined place. Blackwell: Oxford. | ||
'''Contributors''' | '''Contributors''' | ||
Page created by Huub van der Zwaluw [[User:HuubVanDerZwaluw|HuubVanDerZwaluw]] 18:59, 23 October 2012 (CEST) | Page created by Huub van der Zwaluw [[User:HuubVanDerZwaluw|HuubVanDerZwaluw]] 18:59, 23 October 2012 (CEST) |
Revision as of 16:59, 23 October 2012
For Lefebvre the binarism that is created by categories was a problem. He attempted to introduce 'the other' as the third term. Categories such as subject-object, mental-material, natural-social etc had to be completed by a third a term. Soja describes this thirding-as-othering as "the first and most important step in transforming the categorical and closed logic of either/or to the dialectically open logic of both/and also..." The third-as-other is not just a new term that stands between the to opposites but it creates a disordering, a deconstruction and a reconstruction of the opposites (Soja, 1996). Thirding-as-othering is the basis of the concept of Thirdspace.
References
Soja, E.W. (1996). The extraordinary voyages of Henri Lefebvre; The trialectics of spatiality. In Thirdspace: Journeys to los Angeles and other real-and-imagined place. Blackwell: Oxford.
Contributors Page created by Huub van der Zwaluw HuubVanDerZwaluw 18:59, 23 October 2012 (CEST)