Agnew, J., Mercer, J. and Sopher, D.1984: The city in cultural context. Boston, MA: Allen & Unwin.
2.
Anderson, K. and Gale, F. , editors, 1992: Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography. Melbourne: Longman Cheshire.
3.
Badcock, B.A.1994: 'Stressed-out' communities: 'out-of-sight, out-of-mind'?Urban Policy and Research12, 191-97.
4.
Banham, R.1971: Los Angeles: the architecture of the four ecologies. London: Allen Lane.
5.
Bell, D.J.1991: Insignificant others: lesbian and gay geographies. Area23, 323-29.
6.
— 1994: In bed with M.E. Robinson. Area26, 86-89.
7.
Bondi, L.1992: Gender and dichotomy. Progress in Human Geography16, 98-104.
8.
Bourne, L.S.1993: The demise of gentrification? A commentary and prospective view. Urban Geography14, 95-107.
9.
— 1994: Moving beyond the gentrification debate. Paper presented to the Association of American Geographers 90th annual meeting, San Francisco, 29 March-2 April.
10.
Bowlby, S.1984: Women and the built environment. Built Environment10 (special issue).
11.
Boyer, M.C.1993: The city of illusion: New York's public places. In Knox, P.L., editor, The restless urban landscape, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 111-26.
12.
Castells, M.1983: The city and the grassroots: a cross-cultural theory of urban social movements. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press.
13.
Chouinard, V.1994: Reinventing radical geography: is all that's left right?Environment and Planning D: Society and Space12, 2-6.
14.
Daniels, S.1989: Marxism, culture and the duplicity of landscape. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New models in geography. Volume two , London: Unwin Hyman, 196-220.
15.
Davis, M.1990: City of quartz. Excavating the future in Los Angeles. London and New York: Verso.
16.
Dear, M.1994: Postmodern human geography. A preliminary assessment. Erdkunde48, 2-13.
17.
Dear, M.J. and Wolch, J.R.1987: Landscapes of despair. From deinstitutionalization to homelessness. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
18.
Deben, L., Musterd, S. and van Weesep, J., editors, 1992 : Culture and urban regeneration: some European examples. Built Environment18 (special issue).
19.
Domosh, M.1992: Corporate cultures and the modern landscape of New York City. In Anderson, K. and Gale, F., editors, Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography, Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 72-86.
20.
Duncan, J.1992: Elite landscapes as cultural (re)productions: the case of Shaughnessy Heights. In Anderson, K. and Gale, F., editors, Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography, Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 37-51.
21.
Duncan, J. and Ley, D., editors, 1993: Place/culture/ representation. London and New York: Routledge .
22.
England, K.1993: Suburban pink collar ghettos: the spatial entrapment of women?Annals of the Association of American Geographers83, 225-42.
23.
— 1994: Reply to Susan Hanson and Geraldine Pratt. Annals of the Association of American Geographers84, 502-504.
24.
Forest, B.1995: West Hollywood as symbol: the significance of place in the construction of a gay identity. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space13, 133-57.
25.
Galbraith, J.K.1992: The culture of contentment. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin.
26.
Gold, J.R. and Ward, S.V. , editors, 1994: The use of publicity to sell cities and regions. Chichester: Wiley.
27.
Goss, J.1993: The magic of the mall: an analysis of form, function and meaning in the contemporary retail environment. Annals of the Association of American Geographers83, 18-47.
Hanson, S. and Pratt, G.1994: On suburban pink collar ghettos: the spatial entrapment of women?Annals of the Association of American Geographers84, 500-502.
30.
— 1995: Gender, work, and space. London and New York: Routledge.
31.
Harvey, D.1990: Between space and time: reflections on the geographical imagination. Annals of the Association of American Geographers80, 418-34.
32.
Hayden, D.1984: Redesigning the American dream. The future of housing, work, and family life. New York and London: W.W. Norton.
33.
Huxley, M.1994: Space, knowledge, power and gender. In Johnson, L.C., editor, Suburban dreaming. An interdisciplinary approach to Australian cities, Geelong : Deakin University Press, 181-92.
34.
Jacobs, J.1994: The battle of Bank Junction: the contested iconography of capital. In Corbridge, S., Martin, R. and Thrift, N. , editors, Money, power, space, Oxford : Blackwell, 356-82.
35.
Jameson, F.1984: Postmodernism, or the cultural logic of late capitalism . New Left Review146, 53-92.
36.
Johnson, L.C.1994: The postmodern Australian city. In Johnson, L.C., editor, Suburban dreaming. An interdisciplinary approach to Australian cities, Geelong: Deakin University Press, 51-72.
37.
Katz, C.1995: Major/minor: theory, nature, and politics. Annals of the Association of American Geographers85, 164-68.
38.
Kearns, G. and Philo, C.1993: Selling places. The city as cultural capital. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
39.
Keil, R.1994: Global sprawl: urban form after Ford-ism?Environment and Planning D: Society and Space12, 131-36.
40.
Knopp, L.1992: Sexuality and the spatial dynamics of capitalism. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space10, 651-69.
41.
Knox, P.L.1991: The restless urban landscape: economic and socio-cultural change and the transformation of Washington, DC. Annals of the Association of American Geographers91, 181-209.
42.
— 1993: The restless urban landscape. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
43.
Law, R.M. and Wolch, J.R.1993: Social reproduction in the city: restructuring in time and space. In Knox, P.L., editor, The restless urban landscape, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 165-206.
44.
Ley, D. and Mills, D.1993: Can there be a postmodernism of resistance in the urban landscape? In Knox, P.L., editor, The restless urban landscape, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 255-78.
45.
Ley, D. and Olds, K.1992: World's fairs and the culture of consumption in the contemporary city. In Anderson, K. and Gale, F., editors, Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography, Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 178-93.
46.
Little, J., Peake, L. and Richardson, P.1988: Women in cities. Gender and the urban environment. London: Macmillan Education.
47.
Marcuse, P.1993: What's so new about divided cities?International Journal of Urban and Regional Research17, 353-65.
48.
— 1995: Not chaos, but walls: postmodernism and the partitioned city. In Watson, S. and Gibson, K., editors, Postmodern cities and spaces, Oxford and New York: Blackwell, 243-53.
49.
McDowell, L.1993: Space, place and gender relations. Part I. Feminist empiricism and the geography of social relations. Progress in Human Geography17, 157-79.
50.
McDowell, L. and Court, G.1994a: Gender divisions of labour in the post-Fordist economy: the maintenance of occupational sex segregation in the financial services sector. Environment and Planning A26, 1397-418.
51.
— 1994b: Performing work: bodily representations in merchant banks . Environment and Planning D: Society and Space12, 727-50.
52.
McLoughlin, J.B.1994: Centre or periphery? Town planning and spatial political economy. Environment and Planning A26, 1111-22.
53.
Monk, J.1992: Gender in the landscape: expressions of power and meaning . In Anderson, K. and Gale, F., editors, Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography, Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 123-38.
54.
Parisi, P. and Holcomb, B.1994: Symbolizing place: journalistic narratives of the city . Urban Geography15, 376-94.
55.
Patton, P.1995: Imaginary cities: images of postmodernity. In Watson, S. and Gibson, K. , editors, Postmodem cities and spaces, Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Blackwell , 112-21.
56.
Peake, L.1993: 'Race' and sexuality: challenging the patriarchal structuring of urban social space. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space11, 415-32.
57.
Pile, S.1995: 'What we are asking for is decent human life': SPLASH, neighbourhood demands and citizenship in London's docklands. Political Geography14, 199-208.
58.
Pratt, G.1994: Geography and the construction of difference. Gender, Place and Culture1, 5-29.
59.
Pred, A.1990: Lost words and lost worlds. Modernity and the language of everyday life in late nineteenth-century Stockholm. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
60.
Rieder, I., editor, 1990: Cosmopolis. Urban stories by women. Pittsburgh, PA: Cleis Press.
61.
Rose, G.1993: Feminism and geography. The limits of geographical knowledge . Oxford: Polity Press.
62.
Sayer, A.1994: Cultural studies and 'the economy, stupid'. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space12, 635-37.
63.
Sayer, A. and Walker, R.1992: The new social economy. Reworking the division of labor . Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
64.
Soja, E.W.1989: Postmodern geographies. The reassertion of space in critical social theory. London and New York: Verso.
65.
— 1992: Inside Exopolis: scenes from Orange County. In Sorkin, M., editor, Variations on a theme park: the new American city and the end of public space, New York: Noonday Press, 94-122.
66.
— 1995: Postmodern urbanization: the six restructurings of Los Angeles. In Watson, S. and Gibson, K., editors, Postmodern cities and spaces, Oxford and Cambridge, MA : Blackwell, 125-37.
67.
Stilwell, F.1992: Understanding cities and regions. Sydney: Pluto Press.
68.
Swanson, G.1995: 'Drunk with the glitter': consuming spaces and sexual geographies. In Watson, S. and Gibson, K., editors, Postmodern cities and spaces, Oxford and Cambridge, MA : Blackwell, 80-98.
69.
Thrift, N. and Leyshon, A.1992: In the wake of money: the City of London and the accumulation of value. In Budd, L. and Whimster, S., editors, Global finance and urban living. A study of metropolitan change, London: Routledge, 282-311.
70.
Valentine, G.1993: Desperately seeking Susan: a geography of lesbian friendships . Area25, 109-16.
71.
— 1995: Out and about: geographies of lesbian landscapes. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research19, 96-112.
72.
Ward, D. and Zunz, O., editors, 1992: The landscape of modernity: essays on New York City, 1900-1940. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
73.
Watson, S. and Gibson, K.1995: Postmodern cities and spaces. Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Blackwell .
74.
Whitehand, J.W.R. and Larkham, P.J., editors, 1992: Urban landscapes: international perspectives. London: Routledge .
75.
Williams, S.1992: The coming of the groundscrapers. In Budd, L. and Whimster, S. , editors, Global finance and urban living. A study of metropolitan change, London: Routledge, 246-59.
76.
Wilson, E.1995: The invisible flâneur. In Watson, S. and Gibson, K., editors, Postmodern cities and spaces, Oxford and Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 59-79.
77.
Winchester, H.1992: The construction and deconstruction of women's roles in the urban landscape. In Anderson, K. and Gale, F., editors, Inventing places. Studies in cultural geography, Melbourne: Longman Cheshire, 139-56.
78.
Wolfe, T.1989: From Bauhaus to our house. London: Cardinal.
79.
Women and Geography Study Group1984: Geography and gender. London: Hutchinson .
80.
Young, I.M.1990: The ideal of community and the politics of difference . In Nicholson, L.J., editor, Feminism/postmodernism, New York and London: Routledge, 300-23.
81.
Zukin, S.1992a: The city as a landscape of power. London and New York as global financial capitals. In Budd, L. and Whimster, S., editors, Global finance and urban living. A study of metropolitan change, London: Routledge, 195-223.
82.
— 1992b: Postmodern urban landscapes: mapping culture and power . In Lash, S. and Friedman, J., editors, Modernity and identity, Oxford: Blackwell, 221-47.