The concept of 'imagined geographies' has evolved out of the work of
Edward Said, particularly his critique on
Orientalism. In this term, ‘imagined’ is used not to mean ‘false’ or ‘made-up’, but ‘perceived’. It refers to the perception of space created through certain images, texts or
discourses. Imagined geographies can be seen as a form of
social constructivism on par with
Benedict Anderson's concept of
imagined communities.
Orientalism
Main articles: Orientalism (book)
In his book on Orientalism, Edward Said argued that western culture had produced a view of the ‘
Orient’ based on a particular imagination, popularized through
academic Oriental studies,
travel writing and a
colonial view of the Orient. The area was feminized as an open, virgin territory, with no ability or concept of organized rule and government.
Karl Marx, for example, shows this Orientalist style when describing an
India without politics, and
Hindu people as ‘passive’, ‘helpless’, ‘vegetative’, ‘undignified’ and ‘stationary’.
Development of theory
Said was heavily influenced by
Michel Foucault, and those who have developed the theory of imagined geographies have linked these together. Imagined geographies are thus seen as a tool of
power, of a means of controlling and subordinating areas. Power is seen as being in the hands of those who have the right to
objectify those that they are imagining.
Further writers to have been heavily influenced by the concept of imagined geographies included
Derek Gregory and
Gerόaid Ó’ Tuathail. Gregory argues that the
War on Terror shows a continuation of the same imagined geographies that Said uncovered. He claims that the
Islamic world is portrayed as uncivilized; it is labeled as backward and failing. This justifies, in the view of those imagining, the military intervention that has been seen in
Afghanistan and
Iraq. Ó' Tuthail has argued that
geopolitical knowledges are forms of imagined geography. Using the example of
Halford Mackinder's
Heartland Theory, he has shown how the presentation of Eastern Europe/Western Russia as a key geopolitcial region after
World War I influenced actions such as the recreation of
Poland and the
Polish Corridor in the 1918
Treaty of Versailles.
This theory has also been used to critique several geographies created; both historically and contemporairily.
Samuel Huntington’s ''
Clash of Civilizations'' has also been criticized as showing a whole set of imagined geographies. By following
stereotypes and popular discourses and images, Huntington brackets whole sections of the earth into ‘civilization groups’ that are constantly at conflict. Halford Mackinder's 'imperial gaze' has also been shown as an important imagined geography
[1]. This emphasised the importance of the
British Empire over colonial peoples, and asserted the view of the geographical 'expert' with the '
God's eye view'.
The implications of imagined geographies
Imagined geographies show the problems created by the use of popular discourse to construct views of other regions or societies. All landscapes are seen as being imagined – there is no ‘real’ geography to which the imagined ones can be compared to. Thus when being analyzed, these geographies should not be ‘measured’ for their ‘accuracy’, but de-constructed so that the power invested in them can be revealed.
References
★
Huntington, Samuel, 1991,
Clash of Civilizations
★ Gregory, Derek, 2004, ‘The Colonial Present’, Blackwell
★ Marx, Karl, [1853] ‘The British Rule In India’ in Macfie, A.L. (ed.), 2000, ‘Orientalism: A Reader’, Edinburgh University Press
★ Ó' Tuathail, Gearoid, 1996, 'Critical Geopolitcs:The Writing of Global Space, Routledge
★ Said, Edward, [1978]1995, ‘Orientalism’, Penguin Books