Thinking the Geoweb: Political economies, `neo'geographies, and spatial media
| dc.contributor.advisor | Elwood, Sarah | en_US |
| dc.contributor.author | Leszczynski, Agnieszka | en_US |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2013-04-17T18:03:54Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2015-12-14T17:55:51Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2013-04-17 | |
| dc.date.submitted | 2012 | en_US |
| dc.description | Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012 | en_US |
| dc.description.abstract | Critical GIS and GIScience face tremendous methodological and conceptual challenges at present as they grapple with the emergence and proliferation of a diverse range of new, Web-based geographical information technologies that cannot be defined or engaged in terms of conventional GIS. Together, these new hardware/software objects, the new content forms that spatial data are assuming, and practices around these technologies and information artifacts are referred to by geographers as `the geoweb.' The emergence of the geoweb is fundamentally transforming the ways in which society, space, and technology intersect and are co-articulated. Against this backdrop, this research takes the material and digital presences of geoweb phenomena as primary evidence of a transformative moment in the production, distribution, commercialization, circulation, and public awareness of geographic information technologies. On the basis of a content and discourse analysis of textual material thematically about the geoweb that I archived and coded over a period of three years (June 2009 - June 2012), I advance propositions that address the intellectual challenge of thinking - apprehending, conceptualizing, and engaging - the geoweb as a multi-faceted socio-spatio-technical phenomenon. These propositions constitute three threads of an empirically-grounded framework for theorizing the societal transformations wrought through the geoweb on multiple, intersecting levels: i) the political economic relations from which these transformations emerge; ii) the discursive practices that have been used to ensure the sustained consumption and proliferation of geoweb technologies; and iii) the epistemological frames that help us as scholars fully interrogate the diverse material practices/objects that co-constitute the geoweb and the forms of communication and social, spatial, and technological relations it is used to foster. | en_US |
| dc.embargo.terms | Restrict to UW for 2 years -- then make Open Access | en_US |
| dc.format.mimetype | application/pdf | en_US |
| dc.identifier.other | Leszczynski_washington_0250E_11145.pdf | en_US |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/1773/22627 | |
| dc.language.iso | en_US | en_US |
| dc.rights | Copyright is held by the individual authors. | en_US |
| dc.subject | discourse; geoweb; GIS; political economy; spatial media | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Geography | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Geographic information science and geodesy | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | geography | en_US |
| dc.title | Thinking the Geoweb: Political economies, `neo'geographies, and spatial media | en_US |
| dc.type | Thesis | en_US |
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