Geography and the graphic image have a long, intertwined history of exchange. In recent scholarship, the graphic image plays an important role in geography’s creative (re)turn and geographers are experimenting with new visual languages and creative practices to carry out research and communicate with wider audiences. This paper explores geography as a ‘graphic’ discipline that represents and produces spatial knowledge by experimenting with scribing, a verbo-visual technique. In the first part of the article, we propose an auto-ethnographic account of a residential seminar with students in Local and Sustainable Territorial Development, held in 2017 at the Po Delta (Italy), where we experimented with scribing as a tool for geographical fieldwork and spatial storytelling, understanding it as a practice for seeing beyond representing territories. The second more theoretical part of the paper presents scribing as a means to respond to the increasing need for more creative visualisation tools in qualitative research and highlights the performative potential of scribing as a practice/product for thinking about space. The graphic product of scribing results from an intersubjective dialogue and is used to develop spatial analyses and disseminate geographical research beyond academic boundaries, engaging non-expert audiences and local communities.
Abstract. From the colonial era up to the present, mega-irrigation projects for agriculture have played a key role in the production of state space in Sahelian Africa. Transferring a concept proposed by Agnew (1994) onto a different scale, it is possible to interpret these mega-projects as "territorial traps". In fact, they set up boundaries (physical, relational, cognitive and operative) that force evolutive trajectories of the areas involved along rigid pathways. In the aftermath of the systematic failure of the mega-projects, farmers are faced with constraints determined by the trap imposed, without having any of the promised benefits in terms of productive growth, i.e. income. In many situations, the farmers have identified "a means of escape" from these catastrophes by transgressing the boundaries imposed by the territorial traps and reintroducing parts of the infrastructure to a common use. The case study traces the crisis, and ultimately the failure, of the mega-irrigation projects constructed in the 1970s along the shores of Lake Chad in Nigeria.
In Figure 1a, students, local stakeholders, illustrators, and geographers are drawn using scribing to sketch a 'manifesto' for the local development of a peripheral area in north-eastern Italy during a seminar in 2017 (Bertoncin et al., 2021). In Figure 1b,c, this same manifesto is the chosen cover image of the official document presenting the National Strategy for Inner Areas (SNAI), an example of democratic experimentalism and placed-based participatory planning. The decision of the coordinators of the participatory process activated by the SNAI to use the manifesto during their meeting demonstrates the exchange between the
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