David Harvey

Birthday October 31, 1935

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Gillingham, Kent, England

Age 88 years old

Nationality United States

#48189 Most Popular

1935

David W. Harvey (born 31 October 1935) is a British Marxist economic geographer, podcaster, and Distinguished Professor of anthropology and geography at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY).

David W. Harvey was born in 1935 in Gillingham, Kent.

He attended Gillingham Grammar School for Boys and St John's College, Cambridge (for both his undergraduate and post-graduate studies).

1960

By the mid-1960s, Harvey followed trends in the social sciences to employ quantitative methods, contributing to spatial science and positivist theory.

Roots of this work were visible while he was at Cambridge: the Department of Geography also housed Richard Chorley, and Peter Haggett.

1961

He received his PhD in geography from the University of Cambridge in 1961.

Harvey has authored many books and essays that have been prominent in the development of modern geography as a discipline.

He is a proponent of the idea of the right to the city.

1969

His Explanation in Geography (1969) was a landmark text in the methodology and philosophy of geography, applying principles drawn from the philosophy of science in general to the field of geographical knowledge.

But after its publication Harvey moved on again, to become concerned with issues of social injustice and the nature of the capitalist system itself.

He has never returned to embrace the arguments made in Explanation, but still he conforms to the critique of absolute space and exceptionalism in geography of the regional-historical tradition that he saw as an outcome of Kantian synthetic a priori knowledge.

Moving from Bristol University to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore in the United States, he positioned himself centrally in the newly emerging field of radical and Marxist geography.

1970

Injustice, racism, and exploitation were visible in Baltimore, and activism around these issues was tangible in early 1970s East Coast, perhaps more so than in Britain.

The journal Antipode was formed at Clark University; Harvey was one of the first contributors.

1971

The Boston Association of American Geographers meetings in 1971 were a landmark, with Harvey and others disrupting the traditional approach of their peers.

1972

In 1972, in an essay on ghetto formation, he argued for the creation of "revolutionary theory", theory "validated through revolutionary practice".

One of the most important subfields impacted by the rise of Marxist geography was in urban geography.

1973

Harvey established himself as the leader of this subfield with the publication of Social Justice and the City (1973).

Harvey argued in this book that geography could not remain 'objective' in the face of urban poverty and associated ills.

It makes a contribution to Marxist theory by arguing that capitalism annihilates space to ensure its own reproduction.

1982

Dialectical materialism has guided his subsequent work, notably the Limits to Capital (1982), which furthers the radical geographical analysis of capitalism, and several books on urban processes and urban life have followed it.

In 'Limits to Capital' Harvey expanded and innovated Marxist theory with respect to the functioning of money and finance, and the 'spatial moment' in the unfolding of capitalist crisis formation.

1989

The Condition of Postmodernity (1989), written while a professor at Oxford, was a best-seller (the London The Independent named it as one of the fifty most important works of non-fiction to be published since 1945, and it is cited 50,000 times by 2023).

It is a materialist critique of postmodern ideas and arguments, suggesting these actually emerge from contradictions within capitalism itself.

1990

He has a daughter, Delfina, born in January, 1990.

1993

Harvey returned to Johns Hopkins from Oxford in 1993, but spent increasing time elsewhere as a speaker and visitor, notably as a Miliband Fellow at the London School of Economics in the late 1990s.

1996

Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference (1996) focuses on social and environmental justice (although its dialectical perspective has attracted the ire of some Greens.).

2000

Spaces of Hope (2000) has a utopian theme and indulges in speculative thinking about how an alternative world might look.

His study of Second Empire Paris and the events surrounding the Paris Commune in Paris, Capital of Modernity, is his most elaborated historical-geographical work.

2001

The onset of US military action since 2001 has provoked a critique – in The New Imperialism (2003) he argues that the war in Iraq allows US neo-conservatives to divert attention from the failures of capitalism 'at home'.

2005

His next work, A Brief History of Neoliberalism (2005), provides an historical examination of the theory and divergent practices of neoliberalism since the mid-1970s.

This work conceptualises the neoliberalised global political economy as a system that benefits few at the expense of many, and which has resulted in the (re)creation of class distinction through what Harvey calls "accumulation by dispossession".

2007

In 2007, Harvey was listed as the 18th most-cited author of books in the humanities and social sciences in that year, as established by counting citations from academic journals in the Thomson Reuters ISI database.

2010

His book The Enigma of Capital (2010) takes a long view of the contemporary economic crisis.

Harvey explains how capitalism came to dominate the world and why it resulted in the financial crisis.

He describes that the essence of capitalism is its amorality and lawlessness and to talk of a regulated, ethical capitalism is to make a fundamental error.

A series of events linked to this book across London academic forums, such as the LSE, proved popular and sparked a new interest in Harvey's work.

2019

Harvey's early work, beginning with his PhD (on hops production in 19th century Kent), was historical in nature, emerging from a regional-historical tradition of inquiry widely used at Cambridge and in Britain at that time.

Historical inquiry runs through his later works (for example on Paris).

Harvey resides in New York.