Book Reviews
Healthy Urban Environments: More-than-Human Theories, Cecily Maller. Routledge, London and New York, 2018, 166 pp, ISBN 1317217233, ISBN 9781317217237(Hardback)A$242
First published: 22 October 2019
No abstract is available for this article.
References
- Andrews, G. J., 2014. Co-creating health's lively, moving frontiers: brief observations on the facets and possibilities of non-representational theory. Health & Place, 30(Nov), pp. 165–170.
- Andrews, G. J., 2018. Non-Representational Theory & Health: The Health in Life in Space-Time Revealing. New York: Routledge.
- Andrews, G. J., 2019. Health geographies II: the posthuman turn. Progress in Human Geography. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132518805812.
- Andrews, G. J. and Duff, C., 2019. Matter beginning to matter: on posthumanist understandings of the vital emergence of health. Social Science & Medicine, 226(April), pp. 123–134.
- Andrews, G. J., Chen, S. and Myers, S., 2014. The ‘taking place’ of health and wellbeing: towards non-representational theory. Social Science & Medicine, 108(May), pp. 210–222.
- Duff, C., 2018. After posthumanism: health geographies of networks and assemblages. In: V. Crooks, G. J. Andrews and J. Pearce, eds, Routledge Handbook of Health Geography. London: Routledge, Chapter 20.