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Informationen zum Autor Paul C. Adams is an assistant professor of geography at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 2003 and has also taught at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, State University of New York at Albany, Texas A&M University, and McGill University. His articles on communication topics in geography have appeared in the Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Political Geography, Geographical Review, Urban Geography, and Journal of Geography. Klappentext Using the body as an axis for geographical theory, this book argues that communication empowers self to constantly transcend its physical limits. It urges complete review of personal borders in space and time based on symbols, signs and signals that redefine ties to the tangible world, i.e., "Dear John" letters, layout of furniture in rooms, or chronic illness. Paul C. Adams shows how vehicular transit has altered traditional modalities like walking or biking while navigation of space and virtual space has led to "boundary blurring." He covers transforming moments in communication from the rise of writing to invention of the printing press, telephone, and electronic media. To better understand human geography, he also plumbs the relation of space and time to notions of romance, identity, and meaning. Citing geographers throughout the ages and the effects of mercantile, industrial, and current global economies, Zusammenfassung Using the body as an axis for geographical theory! this book argues that communication empowers self to constantly transcend its physical limits. It urges complete review of personal borders in space and time based on symbols! signs and signals that redefine ties to the tangible world.