Place is a foundational concept in human geography but is often regarded as synonymous with terms such as location, locale, region, space, territory, and landscape. It is important to illustrate the diverse ways in which place has been conceptualized through the evolving strands of humanist, phenomenological, radical (including Feminist, Marxist, and Postcolonial), and more recent posthumanist and nonrepresentational thought. This article provides an overview of the evolving theorization of place in geography, and reflects on how assemblage thinking may refine geographical conceptions of place.