TY - JOUR
T1 - Undoing mastery: With ambivalence?
AU - Linz, Jess
AU - Secor, Anna J
PY - 2021/3
Y1 - 2021/3
N2 - In this commentary, we respond to Derek Ruez and Daniel Cockayne’s article ‘Feeling Otherwise: Ambivalent Affects and the Politics of Critique in Geography’. We do so by picking up ambivalence—or more precisely, ambivalence about ambivalence—as a tool with which Ruez and Cockayne leave us. We find this tool somewhat difficult to grasp, but we understand this as part of its design. Ambivalence undoes the subject’s mastery. In doing so, we find that an airing of ambivalence gives other kinds of entangled, indeterminate, and unknowing relations room to breathe.
AB - In this commentary, we respond to Derek Ruez and Daniel Cockayne’s article ‘Feeling Otherwise: Ambivalent Affects and the Politics of Critique in Geography’. We do so by picking up ambivalence—or more precisely, ambivalence about ambivalence—as a tool with which Ruez and Cockayne leave us. We find this tool somewhat difficult to grasp, but we understand this as part of its design. Ambivalence undoes the subject’s mastery. In doing so, we find that an airing of ambivalence gives other kinds of entangled, indeterminate, and unknowing relations room to breathe.
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2043820621995626
U2 - 10.1177/2043820621995626
DO - 10.1177/2043820621995626
M3 - Article
SN - 2043-8206
VL - 11
SP - 108
EP - 111
JO - Dialogues in Human Geography
JF - Dialogues in Human Geography
IS - 1
ER -