The deterritorialization of space in the classic economy
This paper presents a theoretical review of the problem of space in classical economics from the standpoints of contemporary philosophy (Massey and Deleuze), which allows to propose two moments of rupture of the concept of space-territory (deterritorialization) and the affectation they have over dyn...
Autores Principales: | , |
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Formato: | Artículo Revisado por Pares Académicos |
Lenguaje: | Español (Spanish) Español (Spanish) |
Publicado: |
Universidad Libre
2016
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Materias: |
Sumario: | This paper presents a theoretical review of the problem of space in classical economics from the standpoints of contemporary philosophy (Massey and Deleuze), which allows to propose two moments of rupture of the concept of space-territory (deterritorialization) and the affectation they have over dynamics of the economy of capital. The first breakdown is situated in European society between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries, and the second is interpreted from the revision of the concept of urbanized space in modernity that addresses the critical school (Lefebvre). It is concluded that the revision of the present concept of space leads to the question of the possibility of an economic geography of capital, in which there are no dominant categories of territory, frontiers, boundaries, aliens, etc., to which Massey (1994, 2007) adds that part of what is written about postmodern space, place and time emphasizes a new phase of what Marx called "the annihilation of space by time". |
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