Non-representational Theory Théorie non-représentationnelle

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Definition

Derived from Anglo-Saxon research in human geographies and notably developed in the 1990s following the work of Nigel Thrift, ‘non-representational’ refers to various attempts at overcoming the human science’s tendency to privilege the representational model – i.e., a conception of thought considered as a prerequisite to the search for meaning and the accomplishment of action. To the contrary, non-representational approaches of the study of human experience emphasize the practices, materiality, incorporation, and the fundamental role of processes rather than results and productions.

Cite: “Non-representational Theory”, Performascope: Interdisciplinary Lexicon of Performance and Research-Creation, Grenoble: Université Grenoble Alpes, 2021, [online]: http://performascope.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr/en/detail/177907

Perspective

No perspectives

Quotation

« A style of engagement with the world that aims to attend to and intervene in the taking-place of practices. Non-representational theory – a term first coined in human geography by Thrift (1996) – emerged from a caution and a concern about the overvaluation of the ‘representational– referential’ dimensions of life following the discipline’s cultural turn. It responds to two questions: (1) How to disclose and attend to life as a differential, expressive process of becoming, where much happens before and after conscious reflexive thought? (2) How to foster types of description or presentation that attempt to co-produce new events by engaging with and intervening in the practices that compose life? Non-representational theory is not a new paradigm that would eliminate or supersede others, nor does it offer a set of rules and conventions that could form one of a number of holistic conceptions of the world; rather, it names a differentiated set of ways of learning to address these two questions. »

Ben Anderson, « Non-representational theory », in The Dictionary of Human Geography, Derek Gregory, Ron Johnson, Geraldine Pratt, Michael J.Watts, Sarah Whatmore dirs., Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell, 2009, p.503

Bibliography

Ben Anderson, and Paul Harrison dirs., Taking-Place: Non-representational Theories and Geography, Farnham : Ashgate, 2010

Hayden Lorimer, « Cultural Geography: Non-representational Conditions and Concerns », Progress in Human Geography, 32, 4, 2008, pp.551-559, [en ligne] : https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132507086882

Nigel Thrift, Non-representational Theory: Space, Politics, Affect, Londres : Routledge, 2007