Landau-DonnellyFPohlLRoskammN (2021) Introduction. In: LandauFPohlLRoskammN (eds) [Un]Grounding: Post-Foundational Geographies. New York City, NY: Columbia University Press, pp.9–42.
7.
HeideggerM (1993) Basic Concepts. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
8.
FiskerJ (2021) Encountering postfoundationalism in JK Gibson-Graham s space of pregnant negativity: Or, ungrounding the ground itself. In: LandauFPohlLRoskammN (eds) [Un]Grounding: Post-Foundational Geographies. New York City, NY: Columbia University Press, pp.63–80.
9.
MarchartO (2011) Democracy and minimal politics: The political difference and its consequences. South Atlantic Quarterly110(4): 965–973.
10.
PurcellM (2003) Islands of practice and the Marston/Brenner debate: toward a more synthetic critical human geography. Progress in Human Geography27(3): 317–332.
11.
SparkeM (2005) In the Space of Theory: Postfoundational Geographies of the Nation-State. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
12.
SwyngedouwE (2017) Unlocking the mind-trap: Politicising urban theory and practice. Urban Studies54(1): 55–61.
13.
Tolia-KellyDP (2019) Ranciére and the re-distribution of the sensible: The artist Rosanna Raymond, dissensus and postcolonial sensibilities within the spaces of the museum. Progress in Human Geography43(1): 123–140.
14.
ThomassenL (2005) Reading radical democracy: A commentary on Clive Barnett. Political Geography24(5): 631–639.
15.
ButlerJScottJW (1992) Feminists Theorize the Political. London: Routledge.
16.
Gibson-GrahamJK (2006) A Post-capitalist Politics. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
17.
HallSM (2019) Everyday Life in Austerity: Family, Friends and Intimate RelationsSwitzerland: Palgrave Macmillan.
18.
HallSM (2020) Revisiting geographies of social reproduction: Everyday life, the endotic, and the infra-ordinary. Area52(4): 812–819.
19.
HardingS (1991) Whose Science? Whose Knowledge?: Thinking from Women’s Lives. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
20.
KapsaliM (2020) Political infrastructures of care: Collective home making in refugee solidarity squats. Radical Housing Journal2(2): 13–34.
21.
KaraliotasLKapsaliM (2021) Equals in solidarity: Orfanotrofio’s housing squat as a site for political subjectification across differences amid the “Greek crisis”. Antipode53(2): 399–421.
22.
KatzC (1996) Towards minor theory. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 14(4): 487–499.
23.
RoseG (1997) Situating knowledges: Positionality, reflexivities and other tactics. Progress in Human Geography21(3): 305–320.
24.
SwyngedouwE (2014) Where is the political? Insurgent mobilisations and the incipient “return of the political”. Space and Polity18(2): 122–136.
25.
TemenosC (2017) Minor theory and relational urbanism. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space35(4): 579–583.
26.
Van WymeerschEOosterlynckS (2018) Applying a relational approach to political difference: Strategies of particularization and universalization in contesting urban development. In: KnierbeinSVidermanT (eds) Public Space Unbound: Urban Emancipation and the Postpolitical Condition. Abingdon: Routledge, pp.1–16.
27.
BargetzB (2016) Ambivalenzen des Alltags. Neuorientierungen für eine Theorie des Politischen. Bielefeld, Germany: Transcript.
28.
BlakeyJMachenRRuezD, et al. (2022) Intervention: Engaging post-foundational political theory requires an ‘enmeshed’ approach. Political Geography99: 102689.
29.
FiskerJ (2021) Encountering post-foundationalism in JK Gibson-Graham’s space of pregnant negativity: Or, ungrounding the ground itself. In: LandauFPohlLRoskammN (eds) [Un]Grounding: Post-Foundational Geographies. New York City, NY: Columbia University Press, pp.63–80.
30.
GebhardtM (2019) The populist moment: affective orders, protest, and politics of belonging. Distinktion: Journal for Social Theory22(2): 29–151.