Knowledge is never produced in a vacuum. It is shaped by the spaces in which it appears, the scales through which it circulates, the institutions that authorise it, and the bodies that perform, remember, inhabit or contest it. Across the texts studied here, knowledge emerges not as a neutral possession but as a spatial, social and political form. Borges imagines knowledge as an infinite library whose totality overwhelms meaning; Lefebvre, Massey, Harvey, Brenner and Schmid show that spatial knowledge is produced through urbanisation, capitalism and struggle; Foucault reveals the power of “other spaces” to organise social difference; Lynch examines how people cognitively map the city; Bowker shows how scientific knowledge depends upon archives and memory practices; Butler argues that embodied identity is constituted through repeated acts; Bourdieu uncovers the social production of cultural value; Pound insists on precision and disciplined reading; and Meskell-Brocken rethinks cultural participation through lived and contested spaces. Together, these works suggest that the form of knowledge is always also a question of place, scale, memory, performance and power.