
International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education
Editors: A/Prof John Lidstone, Queensland University of Technology and Prof Joseph P. Stoltman, Western Michigan University Book Review Editor: Dr Sarah Witham Bednarz, Texas A & M University Editorial Assistant: Donna Bennett, Australia

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Volume: 15 Number: 4 Page: 324335
doi:10.2167/irg198.0
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Contested Cultural Spaces: Exploring Illicit Drug-using Through Trainspotting
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Judy Hemingway
Geography Department, Institute of Education, University of London
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Contending that culture is one of the most potentially divisive signifiers of human activity, this paper probes some of the complexities that attend the (un)popular culture of illicit drug-using with which many young people in contemporary Britain are identified. Irvine Welshs multi-media drugs narrative Trainspotting is drawn on to explore the politics embedded in Edinburghs low- and high-cultural spaces and interrogate how lived culture is spatially constituted and expressed. Investigations focus on the micromappings of Scotlands drug-using Other which disorder official cartographies of the capital and illustrate the processes of marginalisation. The final part of the discussion argues that the academys recent cultural turn can inform school geography by contributing to a cultural pedagogy which recognises that informal sites of learning can be used with young people to examine the multiple dimensions and dynamics of in/exclusion.
Keywords: cultural geography, cultural pedagogy, Edinburgh, illicit drug-using, space, Trainspotting
© 2006 J. Hemingway


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