Antipode | |
Caption: | Logo for Antipode Foundation |
Editor: | S. Chari, T. Jazeel, K. McKittrick, J.Pickerill and N.Theodore |
Discipline: | Geography |
Abbreviation: | Antipode |
Publisher: | Wiley Blackwell |
Frequency: | 5/year |
History: | 1969-present |
Impact: | 1.915 |
Impact-Year: | 2015 |
Website: | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1467-8330 |
Link1: | http://antipodefoundation.org |
Link1-Name: | Antipode Foundation |
Link2: | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1467-8330/issues |
Link2-Name: | All issues |
Issn: | 0066-4812 |
Eissn: | 1467-8330 |
Lccn: | sf77000176 |
Oclc: | 39738266 |
Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published five times per year by Wiley-Blackwell and produced by The Antipode Foundation. Its coverage centers on critical human geography and it seeks to encourage radical spatial theorizations based on Marxist, socialist, anarchist, anti-racist, anticolonial, feminist, queer, trans*, green, and postcolonial thought. Originally inspired by the social justice movements of the 1960s, the journal supports progressive causes through the work of the Antipode Foundation, a UK registered charity. Antipode is also known for its online "Interventions", its book series, and its diverse workshops and lectures. The chief co-editors are Sharad Chari, Tariq Jazeel, Katherine McKittrick, Jenny Pickerill and Nik Theodore.
Antipode was founded in 1969 by a group of graduate students and junior faculty of the Geography Department at Clark University. It was conceived at the end of a graduate seminar led by David Stea as an attempt to address the pressing issues of the time.[1] The geographers were inspired by movements of the 1960s such as the protests against the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Movement, and the increasing concern for pollution and environmental deterioration. They sought to produce a "radical geography": one that would directly address the root causes of the major societal issues of the time. Embedded in this project was an attempt to reorient the discipline of geography itself, reworking its relationship with social change and intellectual inquiry.[2] [3]
The first issue of Antipode began with a statement written by David Stea:In its early years, the journal was independently published and it relied heavily on the unpaid labor of graduate students. Publications were not peer-reviewed and were often solicited from sympathetic authors. The editing and formatting of the Journal was conducted in a basement office and illustrations were hand drawn, mimeographed, and glued by hand. Copies of the journal were then individually addressed and mailed to subscribers.
In the 1970s, under the editorship of Richard Peet, the Journal reflected a growing engagement with Marxist political economy. During this time, the support of well-known academics, such as David Harvey and Richard Morrill, was crucial to the Journal's development, particularly when it came under attack from more established sectors of the discipline. In 1971, the journal would publish David Harvey's "Revolutionary and Counter Revolutionary Theory in Geography and the Problem of Ghetto Formation,"[4] a landmark paper in the rise of Marxist geography and critical human geography.[5] Feminist geography appeared first in Antipode, then in other journals, an article by Alison Hayford, "The Geography of Women: An Historical Introduction."[6]
Phil O'Keefe, who co-edited the journal with Kirsten Johnson from 1978 to 1980, outlined a plan to professionalize the journal. In 1980 the journal adopted a peer-reviewed format and in 1985 co-editors with Peet, Eric Sheppard and Joe Doherty negotiated a publishing contract with Blackwell (now Wiley-Blackwell) publishing company.[7] This move has been criticized as corporatizing the journal and undermining the intentions set out by the journal's founders.[8] [9] Nonetheless, the journal has flourished in the subsequent decades and it seeks to "continue to push Geography's radical and critical edge" while remaining self-critical.
Today Antipode is widely regarded as one of the most influential academic journals in the discipline of geography.[10] The Antipode Foundation Ltd., registered July 2011 in England and Wales, manages the production of Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography as well as several other projects promoting and supporting critical human geography. The foundation organizes the Institute for the Geographies of Justice, the Scholar-Activist Project Awards, the Antipode Book Series, and a diverse array of lectures and workshops including the well-attended AAG Antipode Lecture.
Name[16] | Years | |
---|---|---|
Ben Wisner | 1969-1970 | |
Richard Peet | 1970-1978, 1978-1985 | |
Phil O'Keefe | 1978-1980 | |
Kirsten Johnson | 1978-1980 | |
Eric Sheppard | 1986-1991 | |
Joe Doherty | 1986-1992 | |
Richard Walker | 1991-1999 | |
Linda McDowell | 1993-1999 | |
Jamie Peck | 2000-2003 | |
Jane Wills | 2000-2003 | |
Noel Castree | 2004-2009 | |
Melissa Wright | 2004-2009 | |
Paul Chatterton | 2009-2013 | |
Vinay Gidwani | 2009-2014 | |
Nik Heynen | 2009-2013 | |
Wendy Larner | 2009-2013 | |
Rachel Pain | 2009-2011 | |
Sharad Chari | 2012–present | |
Tariq Jazeel | 2014–present | |
Katherine McKittrick | 2012–present | |
Jenny Pickerill | 2013–present | |
Nik Theodore | 2013–present |
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