摘要:Society and space, their relations and their structures, constitute the social geography research agenda. Although the intricacies of social and spatial relations have been foci of geographic research during the past decade, the articulation of space and ideology is less often addressed in geographic studies of the social urban environment. While ideology as lived experience in the politics of production, reproduction, and the State has been part of the analysis, it has not been central to it, with few exceptions. Hence, geographical explanations of the expression of dominant ideologies in specific places do not exist.