After that copy copy copy 2
After that, Mol and Law use this topic of blood to question the
many different spatial shapes that social life might take. What
social topologies are analogous to their discussion of blood and
anemia, and how does their debate provide light on these topics?
They contend that there are three completely separate social
environments, often known as social topologies. To begin, there
are certain zones within which things are grouped together into
distinct clusters, and then certain borders are established around
each of these groups. This topology of territorialization is well
established, established, and well known (see Lefebvre 1991).
Second, there are certain networks in which the distance
between two points is determined by the interactions that exist
between the nodes that make up the network. Different
spatialities are generated as a result of the relations that span
distances within the network, which often straddle geographical
borders. Third, there is the topology of the fluid, which we
experienced in the instance of the blood that circulates
throughout the body. Mol and Law contend that in the case of
fluids that flow, neither boundaries nor relations can be used to
differentiate one location from another. Instead, occasionally
borders emerge and fade, allow leakage, or completely vanish,
while ties continue to evolve without being fractured.
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