Geography with John Berger: Questions of Space and Practice
By (Author) Ben Garlick
Edited by Dubravka Sekulic
Contributions by Dr. Leila Dawney
Contributions by Dr. Joe Gerlach
Contributions by Dr. Thomas Jellis
Contributions by Dr. Agata Lulkowska
Contributions by Tom Overton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
5th February 2026
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cultural studies
Literature: history and criticism
Landscape architecture and design
Hardback
176
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This book captures the significance of John Berger's political and creative praxis for scholarship on space, place, landscape and spatial experience.
Geography with John Berger explores John Bergers work, thought, and life within cultural geography, and spatial theory and practice. Ben Garlick, Dubravka Sekulic, and the contributors highlight Bergers insights and contributions to geographical and spatial knowledge through critical engagement with his works and literary practices as an author, critic, collaborator, playwright, filmmaker and artist.
Contributors present a photo essay that is a reflection on, and engagement with, images that articulate personal encounters with two places, documented by the photographer for two different reasons (one personal, one public). They analyse Bergers invoking of confabulations and the sense of how confabulations might contest the ways in which they are arranged. They explore the connectedness of seeing, place, and physical (as well as digital) forms of representation in conversation with John Berger. They discuss themes of time, limits of place and ethics in Bergers work.
This book serves to open Berger to further interest and scrutiny, building on existing engagement with the author within geography and cognate fields to prompt further discussions of the enduring relevance and resonance of his work for contemporary academic, conceptual and worldly developments. In so doing, the chapters provided by authors both within and beyond the discipline of geography model a cross-disciplinary dialogue, emphasising the value of experimentation and creative conversation, as a route to the production of novel arguments and interventions into the understanding of space, place and landscape.
Ben Garlick is an independent scholar and formerly was senior lecturer in Cultural Geography at York St. John University, UK.
Dubravka Sekulic is Senior Tutor and Programme Lead of MA City Design at the Royal College of Art, London, UK.