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2. La Carte de France: Histoire et Techniques: By Jean-Luc Arnaud. Marseille: Éditions Parenthèses, 2022. ISBN (paper) 978-2-86364-330-3. Pp. 444, illus. Euro €56.00.
- Author
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Landais, Benjamin
- Subjects
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CARTOGRAPHIC services , *EURO , *TOPOGRAPHIC maps , *HISTORY of science , *HISTORY of geography , *COPYING - Abstract
"La Carte de France: Histoire et Techniques" by Jean-Luc Arnaud is a book that explores the topographic cartography of France from the Cassini map of 1756 to the present day. The author focuses on state-sponsored maps, excluding other types of maps from the study. The book provides a historical perspective on the development of cartography in France, with an emphasis on the technical aspects and materiality of maps. It is aimed at a wide audience of map enthusiasts, cartographers, and geographers, but some technical explanations may be challenging for non-specialists. The book is divided into two parts, with the second part serving as a guide to the different cartographic series of France. While the book offers valuable insights into the history of French cartography, it primarily focuses on France and its colonial space, with limited international comparisons and perspectives. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Entre líneas: una historia de Colombia en mapas: Edited by Sebastián Díaz Angel, Lucía Duque Muñoz, Santiago Muñoz Arbelaez and Anthony Picón Rodríguez. Bogota: Universidad de los Andes – Editorial Planeta Colombiana S.A., 2023. ISBN (paper) 978-628-7571-09-9. Pp. 384, illus. COL $129,000. ISBN (digital) 978-628-7571-10-5. COL $62,900; US $13.46
- Author
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Gutiérrez Salamanca, Mariano A.
- Subjects
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NAUTICAL charts , *EXHIBITIONS , *HISTORY of cartography , *HISTORY of geography , *MAGNETIC declination - Abstract
"Entre Líneas: una historia de Colombia en mapas" is a book that explores the cartographic history of Colombia and how the image of its territory became a national icon. The book is divided into five chronological sections, each covering a century, and examines the different maps that shaped Colombia's territorial configuration. The authors analyze the maps not only as descriptions but as deliberate actions that impose a past, present, and possible futures. The book also delves into the diverse geography of Colombia and the various cultures and groups that have influenced its maps. Overall, "Entre Líneas" offers a comprehensive and nuanced understanding of Colombia's history through the lens of cartography. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. КУЛЬТУРНО-ИСТОРИЧЕСКОЕ НАСЛЕДИЕ АРМЕНИИ НА ЯЗЫКАХ НАРОДОВ МИРА В ФОНДАХ БИБЛИОТЕКИ ИНОСТРАННОЙ ЛИТЕРАТУРЫ.
- Author
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ВЛАДИМИРОВНА, БЕЛОКОЛЕНКО МАР&
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC paper ,HISTORY of geography ,CULTURAL diplomacy ,RARE books ,CULTURAL property - Abstract
The Library for Foreign Literature has carried out work to identify documents thematically related to the cultural and historical heritage of Armenia. More than 500 documents have been identified in 26 languages of the peoples of the world. The rare book collection presents unique publications of European authors of the 17th and 19th centuries about travel, geography and history, linguistics. There are several historical and linguistic books originally from Venice, the city where the national Armenian printing originated in 1512. The recipients of the collected information are libraries of Armenia, Centers of Armenian Studies, Armenian diasporas in Russia and other countries. The library accepts orders for the production of digital copies of paper originals. The multilingual nature of the identified documents and the Library’s multifaceted activities in the fields of cultural diplomacy ensure the promotion of Armenia’s cultural and historical heritage in a broad international context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. El espacio en el tiempo. Geografía e historiografía en la antigua Grecia: Edited by Francisco J. González Ponce and Antonio L. Chávez Reino. Estudios Clásicos 160. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Clásicos, 2021. ISSN 0014-1453. Pp. 227 (paper). Fully accessible online via http://www.estudiosclasicos.org/eclas-numero/?issue=estudios-clasicos-160-2021
- Author
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Bucciantini, Veronica
- Subjects
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HISTORICAL geography , *HISTORY of geography , *GEOGRAPHERS , *LATIN literature - Published
- 2023
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6. 2022 winner.
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HISTORY of geography ,DOMESTIC violence ,REFUGEE camps ,HUMAN geography - Abstract
Any questions concerning the I Area i Prize for New Research in Geography should be addressed to: Dr Phil Emmerson, Managing Editor: Academic Publications, Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR. The author builds the scene of contingent camps through textured methods and detailed narrative. and Anya Lawrence (University of Birmingham) for 'Six simple steps towards making GEES fieldwork more accessible and inclusive' ( I Area i [3], 54, pp. 52-59). Rosie Hampton (University of Glasgow) for 'Towards an agenda for oral history and geography: (Re)locating emotion in family narratives of domestic abuse in 1970s East Kilbride' ( I Area i [2], 54, pp. 468-475). [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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7. Late eighteenth-century depictions of Peruvian primates in the Codex Martínez Compañón and the Quadro de la Historia Natural Civil y Geográfica del Reyno del Perú.
- Author
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Urbani, Bernardo and Heymann, Eckhard W.
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PRIMATES , *MANUSCRIPTS , *HISTORY of geography , *EIGHTEENTH century , *NUDITY ,SPANISH colonies - Abstract
King Carlos III of Spain supported numerous scientific and intellectual enterprises in Spanish America during the eighteenth century. One was the compilation, between about 1782 and 1785, of a vast 'paper museum', the 'Codex Martínez Compañón' or 'Codex Trujillo del Perú', in the province of Trujillo, Peru. There, the Bishop of Trujillo, Baltasar Jaime Martínez Compañón, directed the preparation of hundreds of coloured illustrations of the people, geography and natural history of the region. Included were 17 images of mammals classified as primates from Peruvian forests. In 1789, this compilation was shipped to Madrid where some of these illustrations were copied into an impressive oil painting by Louis Thiébaut under the direction of the bishop's nephew, José Ignacio de Lecuanda. This painting, the Quadro de la Historia Natural Civil y Geográfica del Reyno del Perú (1799), not only included images of almost a dozen primates, but also accompanying descriptions. Forming part of an unusually large painting, these depictions of New World primates served as channels for ideas about exoticism and potential European initiatives in the forested regions of Spanish America before independence. This paper discusses the identification of the primates and some other mammals portrayed in both Martínez Compañón's Codex and in the Quadro del Perú of Lecuanda and Thiébaut. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. The changing face of geography: a geographical journey through the Australian geographer, 1928–2018.
- Author
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Doolan, Jesse and Gillespie, Josephine
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GEOGRAPHERS ,GEOGRAPHY ,HISTORY of geography ,AUSTRALIAN history ,AUSTRALIANS ,PHYSICAL geography - Abstract
In this paper, we chart the changing character of Australian geographical research based on trends in publications in the Australian Geographer. Using data starting from the journal's inception in 1928 until 2018, we document changes in geographical research reflecting broader trends in the evolution of the discipline. We argue that a long-term perspective, harnessing an empirical approach to data produced over a 90-year publication history, enables geographers to better understand the discipline. Accordingly, we track 'who' is doing geography and 'where' these studies take place. We also ask 'how' geography is being done vis-à-vis physical/human and combined studies. Our analysis of the publication history of the Australian Geographer over the last 90 years aims to provoke broader reflection on the progression of geographical research and the discipline's identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Reflections on the first decade of the HPGRG undergraduate dissertation prize: The geography and politics of reward.
- Author
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Couper, Pauline
- Subjects
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HISTORY of geography , *ACADEMIC dissertations , *PHYSICAL geography , *MATTHEW effect , *RESEARCH teams - Abstract
The History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group launched its undergraduate dissertation prize in 2008. This paper reflects on the dissertations submitted throughout its first decade, highlighting particular themes in Deleuzian-inspired vitalism and immanence, attention to the politics of knowledge production, and the emergence of critical physical geography. The paper also discusses the practice of awarding a prize, noting evidence that this is both shaped by, and reproduces, structural inequalities in academic work. The prize exhibits a particular geography and politics within the academic prestige economy. • Considers submissions to the Undergraduate Dissertation Prize of the History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group. • Highlights key themes from the dissertations reflecting trends in geography. • Notes that there is a geography and politics to undergraduate dissertation prizes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Writing/Righting the world: Reflections on an engaged history and philosophy of geographical thought.
- Author
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Harrison, Richard T.
- Subjects
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HISTORY of geography , *SOCIAL processes , *SERENDIPITY , *RESEARCH teams , *POSTHUMANISM - Abstract
This paper argues for the relevance of the history and philosophy of geography and provides a personal perspective on the origins of the Working Party/Study Group/Research Group by one of its founders. Intellectually, the paper identifies the role of its history and philosophy as the construction and sanctioning of meta-narratives by which meaning is conferred on 'geography'. Practically, the paper summarises the descriptive, normative and personal justifications for the establishment of the Working Party in 1981 in the context of Queen's University Belfast as a zone of civility exemplifying the politics of hope in a militarised, segregated and sectarian society. • The emergence of academic disciplines is a social and historiographical process. • The institutional evolution of disciplines is a function of serendipity, politics and context. • Descriptive, normative and personal factors shape discipline emergence and development. • Contemporary challenges require new modes of intellectual organising. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Towards an agenda for oral history and geography: (Re)locating emotion in family narratives of domestic abuse in 1970s East Kilbride.
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,HISTORY of geography ,ORAL history ,HISTORICAL geography ,BODY language - Abstract
This paper sets out a research agenda for oral history in/and geography, with a particular focus on emotional historical geographies. With three families' relocation from inner‐city Glasgow to the new town of East Kilbride as the empirical backdrop, I argue that oral history methodology is uniquely well placed to capture both the emotionality and spatiality of historical narratives. Whilst previous reviews across geography and oral history theory have considered important emotional markers such as tone of voice, the expression of feeling and body language, I intervene by focusing on different narrative strategies employed throughout the interview and argue that the geographical remit of an interviewee's memories is inseparable from their emotional brevity. The focus of the paper is therefore threefold. Firstly, I consider the subjective temporalities and spatialities that oral history narrators employ when seeking composure, considering how they might "re‐place" their narratives (and thus themselves) in the interview setting. Secondly, I argue that how interviewees might "re‐place" themselves is inextricable, and as such so is any emotional reading of the interview, from the inter‐subjective relationship produced by such an encounter. Finally, I explore the implications of this methodology for carefully elaborating on the intersection between the intimate geographies of the home, and geographies of violence. How the interviewees witnessed domestic abuse among their families was moulded by the context of their relocation. Moreover, the inter‐subjective relationship, an analysis of which I argue is crucial to the findings of the paper, was also distinctly moulded by that same family context – as I was conducting these interviews with members of my own family. This paper establishes the merits of using oral history methodology to explore the emotionality and spatiality of historical‐geographical narratives. Using the new town of East Kilbride in the 1970s as a case study, I set out an emerging research agenda for the interaction between oral history theory and emotional historical geographies ‐ which in turn reveals new avenues for exploring the intimate geographies of domestic abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Torsten Hägerstrand and Christiaan van Paassen's Neighbourly Path, Project and Diorama.
- Author
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van Meeteren, Michiel
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
This paper examines the influence of Christiaan van Paassen's (1917–1996) thinking on the development of time geography. It does so by examining van Paassen's and Torsten Hägerstrand's intertwined lives and friendship through a time‐geographic lens. By understanding their neighbourly path through time–space, their shared project to develop a modern geographical discipline becomes visible. Their shared diorama refers to van Paassen's insistence, adopted by Hägerstrand, that such a project would need to be premised on existentialist principles that accommodate meaning‐making and context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Zašto učiti i kako poučavati hrvatski jezik i kulturu u inozemstvu?
- Author
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Bošnjak, Milan
- Subjects
CROATIAN language ,YOUNG adults ,CATHOLIC missions ,HISTORY of geography ,CLASSROOM activities - Abstract
Copyright of Kroatologija is the property of University of Zagreb, Centre for Croatian Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Publications.
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MATH anxiety ,MATHEMATICS teachers ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,HISTORY of geography ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ECONOMIC sanctions ,CRISIS communication - Published
- 2022
15. GASTRONOMIC TOURISM IN THE REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA - TRENDS AND OPPORTUNITIES.
- Author
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STAVER, Liliana, DODU-GUGEA, Larisa, and STANCIU, Nicolae
- Subjects
FOOD tourism ,CULTURAL pluralism ,TOURIST attractions ,TOURISM ,FAMILY farms ,TRADITIONAL farming ,HISTORY of geography - Abstract
In recent years, gastronomic tourism in the Republic of Moldova has gained momentum due to the country's rich culinary heritage and traditional dishes. The culinary culture of the Republic of Moldova is shaped by its history and geography, with influences from neighbouring countries Romania and Ukraine, as well as its history of being a part of the USSR. The Moldovan wine industry has also played a significant role in driving food tourism, with a long history of winemaking and numerous vineyards and wineries. Moreover, there is growing interest in agritourism, which offers visitors the chance to experience rural life and learn about traditional farming practices. Many small family farms in Moldova provide accommodations and activities such as cooking classes, farming activities, and vineyard visits. Despite the potential for food tourism, Moldova's food tourism industry has yet to reach its full potential. To attract more food tourists, promoting and marketing the country's culinary heritage and traditional dishes, as well as increasing the number of food-related events and activities, could prove beneficial. Gastronomy is an integral part of every community, representing a valuable tourism resource and an essential tool for destination image and branding. This paper aims to analyze the potential of Moldova's food tourism industry and provide recommendations for establishing and developing it further as an important pillar of the country's tourism industry. Moldova's ethnic and social diversity and indigenous communities influence its gastronomy, providing insights into ancient gastronomic traditions, customs, manners, and farming practices, making Moldova a unique and underdeveloped gastronomic tourism destination. Materials and methods: The authors apply a quantitative research approach, analyzing data from the National Bureau of Statistics of the Republic of Moldova to examine trends and opportunities in the country's gastronomic tourism. Various research methods, including analysis, comparison, grouping, and SWOT analysis, were employed. Main results: The findings reveal that Moldova's tourism industry was significantly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 but showed signs of recovery in 2021. The country's rural areas, wine industry, and culinary traditions offer unique opportunities for gastronomic tourism development. However, challenges such as lack of awareness, promotion, limited infrastructure, and low stakeholder collaboration need to be addressed. Conclusions: This study highlights Moldova's potential for gastronomic tourism development. To fully develop this industry, efforts should focus on promoting the country's culinary heritage, increasing food-related events and activities, improving infrastructure and services, fostering collaborations, and leveraging digital platforms. By addressing challenges and capitalizing on opportunities, Moldova can establish and further develop its food tourism industry, contributing to economic growth, job creation, and the promotion of its unique culinary heritage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
16. Bureaucratic Portraiture and Practices of Citizenship.
- Author
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Raheja, Natasha, Strassler, Karen, and Gürsel, Zeynep Devrim
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,IDENTIFICATION documents ,ACADEMIC discourse ,HISTORY of geography ,BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
In lay and academic discourse, bureaucracy almost seems coterminous with the production and circulation of paper, writing, and type. Indeed, the flows of bureaucratic paperwork and documentation weigh heavy, but how are other media and material forms implicated in bureaucratic relationships and encounters? This Special Section considers the photographic portrait as an enduring bureaucratic technology across different histories and geographies. How are people's likenesses key media of social recognition and aspirational performances of citizenship? Given that making and circulating images is now widely accessible across the globe, how has photography become a significant means through which subjects struggle for recognition in the contemporary moment? Focusing on state borders and categories, we argue that bureaucracy's demand for identification documents has not only sustained photographic practices but also shaped the ways people in liminal positions advance claims of citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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17. APUNTES EN TORNO A LOS ALCANCES DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN PRESENTE SOBRE EL ESTADO AUTORITARIO LATINOAMERICANO Y SU ESCUELA.
- Author
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García, Natalia, Giner de los Ríos, Juan B. Alfonseca, and Mateus Carreñoγ, Tania M.
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POLITICAL participation ,MILITARY government ,DICTATORSHIP ,HISTORY of geography ,WAR - Abstract
Copyright of Historia y Memoria de la Educación is the property of Historia y Memoria de la Educacion and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. ACROSS THIS LAND: A Regional Geography of the United States and Canada: 2nd edition. By John C. Hudson. xxi and 529 pp.; ills., bibliog., index. Baltimore, M.D.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2020. $69.95 (paper), isbn 9781421437583; $69.95 (eBook), isbn 9781421437590
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,HISTORICAL geography ,ELECTRONIC books ,HISTORY of geography ,PHYSICAL geography ,MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
This second edition of John Hudson's well-known textbook comes 18 years after the first edition. Hudson says regional geography "tends to be long on facts", and offers "a framework for those facts and an interpretation of their relevance ... " (xv). That's common in textbooks, but I think it reduces the value of those many references (some textbooks in regional geography do have citations). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. On (auto)biography and the history of geography.
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Johnston, Ron
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,HUMAN geography ,PHYSICAL geography ,URBAN geography ,GEOGRAPHERS ,RURAL geography - Abstract
The history of geography as an academic discipline - basically from the late nineteenth century on - has been based very largely on the printed material, the books and papers published by those self-identified as geographers, bolstered where possible by archival sources. What, for example, stimulated Emrys Jones, at the time when he was pioneering urban social geography (Jones [27]), to write a paper on "Cause and effect in human geography" (Jones [26]); why did he publish it in the I Annals of the Association of American Geographers i ; and why did it have so little apparent impact? Musing about (auto)biography's role in the history of geography has led me to wonder how we might construct an appreciation of the discipline's past which does just that for geography's history with the increasing number of parts now becoming available.[21] Jones presented a paper at the Institute's 1950 conference based on his pioneering social geographical work undertaken during his year in the United States, but it was rejected by I Transactions i because it was considered sociology and not geography (Jones [28]: it was published as Jones [25]). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2019
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20. GEOGRAPHIA EST VIA VITAE: THE SLOVAK ANABASIS OF THE CZECHOSLOVAK ANTHROPOGEOGRAPHER JIŘÍ KRÁL (1893-1975).
- Author
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MATLOVIČA, René and MATLOVIČOVÁ, Kvetoslava
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,EDUCATORS ,HUMAN geography ,COLLEGE teachers ,EARLY retirement ,ROMANIES ,LITERARY research - Abstract
Professor Jiří Král was, together with Viktor Dvorský, one of the most important founders of Czechoslovak anthropogeography. This Prague native and son of the eminent Czech philologist Josef Král studied Slavic philology, history and geography at the Charles University in Prague. His primary research interests were in the field of literary history and geography of Slavic countries. He worked briefly as a high school professor and in 1919 took up a position as an assistant to Professor Václav Švambera at the Geographical Institute of Charles University in Prague. In 1924 he was habilitated and in 1929 he filled a vacant post at the Comenius University in Bratislava after the departure of František Štůla. In this paper, we will discuss his stay in Bratislava in 1929-1938, which turned out to be the culminating period of his academic career. Král was an enthusiastic geographer who was not afraid to open new research agendas in accordance with his personal motto “Geographia est via vitae”. However, his journey through life was an anabasis, i.e. full of hardships in overcoming various obstacles and problems. He had very difficult relations in the academic community and in the following period faced multiple persecutions and early retirement as a result of the rise of the totalitarian regimes of Nazism and Communism. Despite formal rehabilitation in 1966, he was not allowed to resume full participation in academic life. In this paper we will discuss in more detail the pedagogical, research and organizational activities of J. Kral during his time in Bratislava. Based on a detailed study of archival materials, we will highlight some of his lesser-known initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
21. Carcinogenic geography: On! the history And philosophy of geography.
- Author
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Doel, Marcus A.
- Subjects
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HISTORY of geography , *COVID-19 pandemic , *REVOLUTIONS , *RESEARCH teams , *GEOGRAPHERS - Abstract
In the wake of the elision of the 35th and 40th anniversaries of the History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group (HPGRG) of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers) (RGS-IBG) due to a coronavirus pandemic, the paper takes advantage of the anniversal twists and turns to deconstruct what is going to come without getting any closer and without moving any further away, and to hail the cancerous growth that is driving the revolution of geographical thought. With candles at the ready, my birthday wish is for geographical thought to perish, save the cancer (and the virus). • An anniversary has a strange temporality and spatiality, by way of which what is going to come and coming to go approaches without getting any nearer. • The twists and turns of an anniversary exemplify the deconstruction of time and space. • By deconstructing the anniversary of the RGS-IBG's History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group, the paper reveals a cancer at the core of geographical thought. • Given that the history and philosophy of geography continues to be ravaged by a cancerization of its theoretical discourse, the paper argues that it would be advisable to let geographical thought perish and to save the cancer instead. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Editorial.
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HISTORY of geography ,HUMAN geography ,ECONOMIC geography ,PUBLISHING - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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23. Verticalities in oral histories of science.
- Author
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Merchant, Paul
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HISTORY of science ,HISTORY of geography ,SCIENTISTS ,ORAL history ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the way in which scientists speak—in extended life‐story interviews recorded recently—about the role of verticality (understood here as an orientation in space: up/down rather than across) in past scientific work. In particular, I explore several episodes of scientific work in which (the scientists involved tell us) verticality emerged unexpectedly as an important aspect of the work. I argue that these stories tell us about previously neglected features of the geography of science as well as about the various influences on scientists' written and spoken accounts. I show that attention to stories of fieldwork featuring different aspects of verticality—vertical distance, rate of fall, and position under—sheds new light on the doing of science and its narration after the event, in such different communications as scientific papers and life‐story recordings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Encountering the city: Haptic images of suburban Darwin.
- Author
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Lobo, Michele
- Subjects
TOUCH ,EXPRESSIVE arts therapy ,ART theory ,PUBLIC spaces ,URBAN life ,SOMATIC sensation ,HISTORY of geography - Abstract
Photographs by research participants capture the multisensory dimension of encounters in shared public spaces that are often difficult to articulate in words. Rather than freezing the moment in stillness, these images of movement and feeling that fuse vision, sound, touch, taste and smell show how racially differentiated bodies explore the city through practices that are part of their everyday life. This paper draws on photographs and poetry by long‐term residents of Aboriginal and ethnic‐minority backgrounds who express what touches or happens to their bodies in open‐air Asian‐style markets of Darwin, a rapidly developing tropical north Australian city. Such attention to bodily encounters is central to more‐than‐representational and feminist approaches that affirm the diversity, materiality and vitality of urban life. In this paper I argue that Deleuzian thinking on images and Elizabeth Grosz's non‐aesthetic philosophy for art contributes to this literature by providing an insight into how sensing bodies use photography and poetry to make imperceptible affective forces and matter expressive. The paper shows that such an approach is productive in thinking about the potentialities of city life for bodies of colour with different histories and geographies of racialisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Educación Geográfica Panamericana para el Desarrollo Sostenible.
- Author
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Álvarez Barahona, Sandra and Araya Palacios, Fabián
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HISTORY of geography ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ORGANIZATION ,COMMITTEES - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ateliê Geográfico is the property of Revista Atelie Geografico and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. La investigación sobre el uso del libro de texto de Ciencias Sociales, Geografía e Historia en España: una revisión sistemática.
- Author
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González-González, José-Manuel, Carlos Bel, Juan, Colomer Rubio, Juan Carlos, and Rivero, Pilar
- Subjects
HISTORY textbooks ,HISTORY of geography ,ELECTRONIC textbooks ,AREA studies ,TEXTBOOKS ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Complutense de Educación is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Placing critical geographic thought. A commentary on David Chandler and Jonathan Pugh's 'Abyssal geography'.
- Author
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Grove, Kevin
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,HUMAN geography ,HISTORY of geography ,POLITICAL geography ,BLACK feminists - Abstract
Their turn to the abyssal through engagement with the work of Caribbean and Caribbean-inspired thinkers - notably, Glissant, Benítez-Rojo, Moten and Sharpe - strives to "question the lure of ontology" (Chandler and Pugh, [2]: 1), and it does so by foregrounding how, as Pugh ([12]) has written elsewhere, ontologies are human creations. Chandler and Pugh's paper thus provides us with additional tools to further unsettle the sedimented subject of white, heterosexual, male, Anglo-American geography. Abyssal geographies, as I read them in Chandler and Pugh's work, thus direct our attention to the entwinement of desire and thought, where-ever thinking takes place. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Editorial: into a third decade.
- Author
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Coe, Neil M, Iammarino, Simona, Kerr, William R, Patacchini, Eleonora, and Robert-Nicoud, Frédéric
- Subjects
ECONOMIC geography ,GLOBAL production networks ,HISTORY of geography ,HUMAN geography ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
JEG is privileged to receive over 450 submissions each year, far more than can be published, meaning that we can # TheAuthor(s)(2021).PublishedbyOxfordUniversityPress.Allrightsreserved.Forpermissions,pleaseemail:journals.permissions@oup.com Journal of Economic Geography 21 (2021) pp. 165-168 doi: 10.1093/jeg/lbab006 Advance Access Publication 28 February 2021 Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/joeg/article/21/2/165/6154335 by 81695661, OUP on 09 April 2021 consistently select papers of the highest quality within our field. Reflecting this trend, JEG no longer has a book review editor. Neil M. Coe *, Simona Iammarino **, William R. Kerr***, Eleonora Patacchini**** and Fre 'de 'ric Robert-Nicoud***** *Department of Geography, National University of Singapore, 1 Arts Link, Kent Ridge, Singapore 117570 **Department of Geography and Environment, London School of Economics and Political Science, London WC2A 2AE, UK ***Harvard Business School, Rock Center 212, Boston, MA 02163, USA ****Department of Economics, Cornell University, Uris Hall, 109 Tower Road, Ithaca, NY 14853-2501, USA *****Geneva School of Economics and Management, University of Geneva, CH-1211, Geneve 4, Switzerland 2021 sees the Journal of Economic Geography (JEG) enter its third decade of publication, offering an apposite moment to briefly reflect upon its evolution and trajectory. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
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29. A prehistory of the polycentric urban region: excavating Dutch applied geography, 1930–60.
- Author
-
van Meeteren, Michiel
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,REGIONAL planning ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Peter Hall's analysis of the Dutch Randstad, in his The World Cities (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1966), generated the archetype of the polycentric urban region (PUR). Although influential, Hall primarily amplified 1950s' Dutch planning discourse. This paper analyses the PUR's genesis, discussing the economic modernization of the 1950s and the preceding decades of crisis and war. By temporalizing Gieryn's truth-spot theory, the paper constructs a prehistory of the PUR through the biographical trajectories of Dutch geography and planning pioneers Louis van Vuuren, Willem Steigenga, Christiaan van Paassen and Gerrit Jan van den Berg. Planning the PUR is recast as a gentle modernization strategy, signalling new interpretations of polycentricity's contemporary utility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. 'Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world': And what's economic geography going to do about it?
- Author
-
Barnes, Trevor
- Subjects
- *
GEOGRAPHY , *ANARCHISM , *ECONOMIC geography , *GLOBAL production networks , *POLITICAL economic analysis , *HISTORY of geography , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 - Abstract
"Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world": And what's economic geography going to do about it? It is against this looming future that Henry Yeung ([13]) has written "Troubling economic geography" about the discipline's looming future. The paper is a critical commentary of Henry Yeung's paper, 'Troubling economic geography: new directions in the post-pandemic world'. In Kuhn's example, one now saw only bunnies, whereas before it was only ducks.[4] Or, in the case of economic geography, as John Hudson said, he saw now only "points and lines", whereas before he saw regions and Hartshornian element complexes.[5] The second is economic geography after the 1970s crisis of deindustrialisation and Fordism. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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31. A marginal man and his central contributions: The creative spaces of William (‘Wild Bill’) Bunge and American geography.
- Author
-
Barnes, Trevor J.
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability ,HISTORY of geography ,PUBLICATIONS - Abstract
The aim of the paper is to develop a geographical account of creativity by drawing on Arthur Koestler’s work. For Koestler creativity is sparked by the clash of two incompatible frames of meaning, and resolved by a new act of creation. Missing from Koestler’s account is geography, however. To show how geography might be brought into Koestler’s scheme the paper works through a detailed case study within the recent history of geography: the writing and publication of two very different but equally creative books by the well-known American geographer, William Bunge (1928–2013). In the late 1950s at the University of Washington, Seattle, Bunge wrote Theoretical Geography (1962), a meticulously executed hymn to the mathematics of abstract space, and which helped transform the discipline of geography into spatial science. Then during the late 1960s in inner-city Detroit Bunge wrote Fitzgerald: Geography of a Revolution (1971), and quite a different hymn. It was a paean to urban rebellion, to grassroots neighbourhood insurrection. It focussed not on abstract space, but a very concrete place: the one mile square that formed the Detroit inner city neighbourhood of Fitzgerald. In this case, Bunge’s book was a forerunner to radical geography. Catalytic to both of Bunge’s acts of creation, the paper argues, were the marginal spaces in which he wrote, marginal in the sense that they were distant from mainstream American academic geography. Incorporating them provides not only an explanation creativity within geography, but also geography’s own geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Geographical Network Analysis.
- Author
-
Uitermark, Justus and van Meeteren, Michiel
- Subjects
POWER (Social sciences) ,HISTORY of geography ,SOCIAL network analysis ,VERSTEHEN - Abstract
As the volume of digital data is growing exponentially and computational methods are advancing rapidly, network analysis is an increasingly important analytical tool to understand social life. This paper revisits the rich history of network analysis in geography and uses insights from that history to review contemporary computational social science. Based on that analysis, we synthesize the distinctive qualities of what we term geographical network analysis. Geographical network analysis presumes that networks are situated, construed through meaning, and reflect power relations. Instead of pursuing parsimonious explanations or universal theories, geographical network analysis strives to understand how uneven networks develop across space and within place through a constant back and forth between abstraction and contextualization. Drawing on the articles in this special issue, this paper illustrates how geographical network analysis can be put to work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Reflecting on the powers, possibilities and constraints of geography curricula in England, Finland and Sweden.
- Author
-
Hammond, Lauren, Healy, Grace, Bladh, Gabriel, and Tani, Sirpa
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *NATIONAL curriculum , *KNOWLEDGE representation (Information theory) , *HISTORY of geography , *GEOGRAPHY education - Abstract
National curriculum statements found within the Official Recontextualising Field (ORF) provide an insight into how geography as a school subject is conceptualized in a country’s education system. National curricula can shape teachers’ agency in curriculum making and what, how and where children and young people study and learn geography. This paper engages with the lower secondary national geography curriculum for England, Finland and Sweden. We examine the structure and nature of the national geography curricula in each country, before drawing on the
threefold arrangement of geographical knowledge as a tool for the analysis of the curricula. Our analysis found thatdeep and descriptive world knowledge forms the largest proportion of all three national curricula documents, and we argue that this can lead to a potentially limited conceptualization of geographical knowledge and representation of geography. We also suggest that the threefold arrangement could more actively engage with political dimensions when considering futures, and that there should be greater attention paid to the histories and geographies of the discipline (geography) in school geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Rail relations: Aboriginal storywork and remaking Australia’s settler‐colonial infrastructure.
- Author
-
Blatman, Naama, Taksa, Lucy, Silverstein, Ben, McManus, Phil, Barker, Lorina, and Webb, Angela
- Subjects
- *
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *FORCED migration , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *HISTORY of geography , *INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
Australian railway histories are dominated by narratives of engineering triumphs, colonial expansion into empty land, and bringing civilisation and development through railway infrastructure. These settler‐colonial stories can be read back on themselves as histories and geographies of Aboriginal dispossession and colonial possession. Indeed, Aboriginal people, lands, waterways, and cultures have always been implicated in railway infrastructures, willingly or not. Aboriginal people’s entanglements with the New South Wales railways, to which we refer as “rail relations,” have involved dispossession, removal, employment, mobility, and travel, including the forced removal of children known as the Stolen Generations. These are relations of harm, loss, and grief but also of pride, connectivity, and survival. We argue in this paper that when Aboriginal communities engage in storying the New South Wales railways as Aboriginal they reassemble this infrastructure otherwise: not just as a tool of dispossession but also as life affirming. Indigenous storytelling can therefore overcome settler colonial erasure and the oversimplification of railway infrastructure hi/stories. Research about how Aboriginal lives have been interconnected with railways expansion and development is limited. While Aboriginal railway stories are continuously told within communities, they remain almost entirely silenced elsewhere. Overcoming the invisibility of Aboriginal rail relations is crucial as both truth‐telling of the past and to ensure more just infrastructural outcomes now and in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The poetics of geographical knowledge: For a genealogy of geographical aesthetics in history and philosophy of geography.
- Author
-
Brigstocke, Julian
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of geography , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *PHILOSOPHY of history , *GEOGRAPHERS , *POETICS , *HISTORICAL geography - Abstract
This short reflection on forty years of the UK's History and Philosophy of Geography group reflects on the poetics of geographical knowledge. Whilst histories of geography have diverged from philosophies of geography over recent years, the intervention proposes that a useful avenue of enquiry for future work is to develop fuller historical and philosophical accounts of the forms and poetics of geographical writing. This includes: philosophical reflection on form and space; historical studies of the varying forms, styles, and poetics of geographical knowledge; and active experiments with formal aspects of writing. Through a short reflection on the ethics of Jean-Marie Guyau (a sociologist whose naturalist and vitalist ethics had an important influence on anarchist geographers) the paper proposes an approach to the authority of geographical texts that is animated by an anomic ethos that is: genetic; affirmative; and generous. • Proposes an agenda for future histories and philosophies of geography based on experimental genealogical analyses of form and aesthetics. • Explores the different forms of authority co-constructed through the forms, styles and genres of geographical writing. • Argues that a productive space of intersection between history and philosophy of geography can be found in a revitalised genealogical study of the forms and aesthetics of geographical writing. • Draws on Jean-Marie Guyau's vitalist ethics to argue for a genealogical approach to ethics of history and philosophy of geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Dutch inspiration for an engaged pluralist historiography of geography.
- Author
-
van Meeteren, Michiel
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN geography , *HISTORY of geography , *GEOGRAPHY , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *SILOS - Abstract
This paper introduces to an international audience the 'encyclopaedic approach' to geographical historiography. This approach was developed at the Free University of Amsterdam between 1961 and 1987 by Marcus Heslinga and Andries Kouwenhoven. Signalling how contemporary geography is hampered by the silofication of different subdisciplines and how a better understanding of our shared and pluriform histories can help overcome these silos, the encyclopaedic approach demonstrates how an 'engaged pluralist' historiography of geography could take shape. Testifying to its bridge-building character, the approach was developed in response to decades of acerbic conflict between rivalling schools of human geography in the Netherlands. Its central premises involve an acknowledgement that geography is a dynamic discipline with shifting formal and material objects and an empirical strategy to map and relate these different conceptual fields. • Chronicles the encyclopaedic approach to the history of human geography developed by Marcus Heslinga and Andries Kouwenhoven. • Situates the emergence of the engaged pluralist encyclopaedic approach in the history of Dutch human geography. • Discusses how the encyclopaedic approach inspiresto overcome the silofication and fragmentation of contemporary geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How geographic thought happens: The autobiography of a mutable mobile.
- Author
-
Cresswell, Tim
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL geography , *HISTORY of geography , *AUTOBIOGRAPHY , *MARXIST philosophy , *GEOGRAPHERS - Abstract
This article approaches the history of geographic thought through a partial autobiography that covers the last 40 years – a period that corresponds with the existence of the History and Philosophy of Geography Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). The paper is informed by both memory and a personal archive of material from the mid to late 1980s. The autobiographical material is linked to the places that the author passed through and the ways these places, and the assemblage of people in them, influenced the author's development of ideas around place, mobility and knowledge. In this sense, this is an account of how theory, scholarship and the scholars that produce them arise in networked ways through connections that are embedded in place but are often from elsewhere, traveling through. • An autobiographical approach to the history of geographic thought. • Explores the role of places as centers of calculation in an autobiography. • Surveys developments in geographic thought since the 1980s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Why the history and philosophy of geography matter: Louise Michel's radical, anticolonial, and pluralist geographies.
- Author
-
Ferretti, Federico
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of feminism , *HISTORY of geography , *POLITICAL agenda , *ANTI-racism , *ANTI-imperialist movements - Abstract
In this short paper, I contend that the history and philosophy of geography should be considered as an indispensable scholarly field to nourish both theoretical speculations about geography and ongoing scholars' political and social engagement towards critical, radical, decolonial, feminist and antiracist geographies. I argue that rediscovering 'other geographical traditions' is paramount to these scholarly and political agendas. After briefly summarising my political and theoretical references, I discuss the example of the work of anarchist, feminist and anticolonial activist Louise Michel (1830–1905) to make the case for the inclusion of new figures and ideas in the field of new decolonial, multilingual and pluralist histories of geography. • Performs a militant plea for the History and Philosophy of Geography. • Discusses recent works on alternative geographical traditions and decoloniality. • Makes the case for reading geographically the work of anarchist, feminist and anti-colonial activist Louise Michel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Wordplay, world‐play, and interdisciplinary imaginations.
- Author
-
Hayes, Emily
- Subjects
PLAYS on words ,IMAGINATION ,GEOGRAPHERS ,HISTORY of geography - Abstract
By mapping examples of geographical portmanteau words, this paper aims to elucidate several interdisciplinary imaginative practices. It presents examples of verbal invention in the publications and rhetorical practices of three geographers, Francis Galton, John Frederick Heyes, and Halford Mackinder, which demonstrate individual words, especially neologisms and portmanteau words, can reflect concepts of space and disciplinary spaces. The paper traces perceptions of the relations between word‐making and world‐making via examples of re‐scaling, including magnification and shrinkage of words, as well as the moving, subtraction, and addition of syllables or letters in certain words, including geography, philosophy, and geosophy. In drawing on the wordplay of these figures, it argues that portmanteau words evidence parallels between late 19th‐century and early 20th‐century chemical and geographical practices that have important implications for 20th‐century geographies and languages of knowledge‐making. This paper maps examples of geographical wordplay. In doing so it elucidates how several individual words, especially neologisms and portmanteau words, reflect spatial concepts, disciplinary spaces, and interdisciplinary practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Globale Musikgeschichte – der lange Weg: Das Forschungsprojekt „Towards a Global History of Music" (International Balzan Prize Foundation, Mailand).
- Author
-
Strohm, Reinhard
- Subjects
WORLD history ,MUSICOLOGY ,HISTORY of geography ,MASS migrations ,ETHNOMUSICOLOGY ,MUSIC history ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) - Abstract
The paper is an overview of the musicological research project „Towards a global history of music", which was carried out between 2013 and 2017 on the basis of a Balzan Prize for Musicology (2012), with the assistance of international music research institutes and their specialists. A main outcome of the project are three collective volumes of papers, published in 2018, 2019 and 2021, respectively. The project has viewed the variety of musical experiences around the world as a historical unfolding, to be explored via a „long path" through both geography and history. It has queried the enlightenment idea of a fundamental unity of all music (universalism), and the often fragile status of musical-cultural identities on the regional or national levels. It has sought to join methodologies of ethnomusicology and historical research, and has observed that the concepts of music and historiography themselves are less than universal. To the discourses of globalisation and modernisation, the project has added the alternative of transculturality, allowing for more neutral or participatory interpretations of cultural encounter. Summarising this research, tensions between nation and migration, regionalism and adaptation, ‚radial' and ‚imposed' globality are shown. The paper proposes to expand such studies into non-scientific practice and to find new institutional bases, which would benefit further global understanding and sharing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Entangled histories of place and reconfigurations of diasporic home: Al‐Andalus history and the Moroccan diaspora in Granada, Spain.
- Subjects
DIASPORA ,HISTORY of geography ,BUILT environment ,URBAN history - Abstract
In this paper, I contribute to scholarship on diasporic geographies of home and develop ideas around "diaspora transregions" and "diaspora cities." To do this, I examine Moroccan diaspora formations in the city of Granada in the south of Spain. I utilise the spatiality and history of Granada to reveal complex interpretations of diasporic home. In particular, I examine how the Muslim history of Al‐Andalus – which is intimately embedded in the urban landscape of Granada and also entangled into the history of the wider region – impacts on Moroccan diaspora consciousness. This involves examining how histories and geographies of Al‐Andalus are interpreted and experienced by those in the Moroccan diaspora, which in this analysis is a diasporic population primarily from northern Morocco. I analyse four intersecting impacts of history and place, including nostalgia and imagined geographies, religious and genealogical links to Granada and the wider region, identification with culture and the built environment, and finally the ambivalence of history on belonging. What this examination reveals is that the history of Al‐Andalus and an identification with historical circular migrations between northern Morocco and southern Spain can engender a sense of being part of multiple diasporic journeys and settlements, and subsequently a 'homing desire' to multiple spaces. A key contribution here is the illustration of how entangled urban and regional histories can reconfigure more normative notions of the diaspora condition. Diasporic connections to deep histories of place and migration can rework senses of home and refute notions of a linear homing desire to a singular nation‐state. This demonstrates that diasporic belongings are not always limited to the parameters of the nation, but rather are informed by the intersections of urban and regional cultures, religions, and histories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Making Mount Kilimanjaro German: Nation building and heroic masculinity in the colonial geographies of Hans Meyer.
- Author
-
Michel, Boris
- Subjects
PHYSICAL geography ,NATION building ,MASCULINITY ,GEOGRAPHY ,AUTOPOIESIS - Abstract
In 1885, as Germany claimed dominion over what was to become German East Africa, Mount Kilimanjaro became the highest German mountain; in 1889, the German geographer Hans Meyer was the first European to reach its summit. The "conquest" of Kilimanjaro was more than just one man's heroic adventure; it was an event that brought together Geography, the building of the German nation and European imperialism. This paper seeks to explore Hans Meyer's production of geographical knowledge about Kilimanjaro and the way in which the geographical gaze of one man gave rise to an object at which others could gaze and about which they could read. Building on scholarship on exploration, field work in Colonial Geography, and the production of the geographical self, the paper follows Meyer to the field in colonial German East Africa, and back to academia, publishing houses and public talks in Germany. In so doing, the paper encounters not only the production of knowledge about Physical Geography, the messiness of fieldwork and a wide range of technologies of observation and recording, but also the production of the white, male and German geographer as a trustworthy witness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Architectural History and the Material Geographies of the Colonial Tasman World.
- Author
-
King, Stuart and Leach, Andrew
- Subjects
ARCHITECTURAL history ,CONSTRUCTION materials ,HISTORY of geography ,MINERAL industries - Abstract
An architectural history that foregrounds materials over the intentions of the architects and other agents of procurement and design places works and the means of their production into fields that do not map neatly on to established geographies. Drawing on a recent body of work concerned with those architectural histories of the Tasman world and the interplay of extractive industries and "grey" architecture, this paper reflects on the conceptual stakes of prioritising specific industries over habitual historiographical frames. Timber's dual standing as an extracted resource subject to the vicissitudes of trade, and as a building material deployed in settings immediately adjacent to forests and at significant distances from its point of origin, exposes the complexity of a form of architectural history attentive to historical events and the images history necessarily draws from them. The paper responds to a proposal by Mark Crinson intended to address this complexity, suggesting that an architectural history of timber in the specific setting of the colonial Tasman world may offer a useful test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The geographers in the cupboard: Narrating the history of Geography using undergraduate dissertations.
- Author
-
Bruinsma, Mette
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,GEOGRAPHERS ,CUPBOARDS ,UNDERGRADUATES ,PHYLOGEOGRAPHY ,ARCHIVAL research - Abstract
This paper explores the possibilities of examining undergraduate dissertations as sources. By means of archival research on a collection of Geography undergraduate dissertations at the University of Glasgow, comprising over 2,600 dissertations from 1954 to 2014, this paper argues for the epistemological value of both these "small" knowledge productions and the experiences of becoming a geographer for studying the history of Geography. A sustained study of the collection reveals that the dissertations comprise three kinds of sources: intellectual sources, seeing the dissertations as original pieces of academic research; cultural sources, examining the role of this "rites of passage" in becoming a geographer; and lastly, as social sources, whereby the dissertations illuminate a diverse, personal network within and beyond the university. The vastness of the archival collection of undergraduate Geography dissertations and the opportunities offered for a longitudinal examining of shifts within them over the years, revealing notable overall trends and traditions, ultimately discloses their own importance as exciting and striking original knowledge productions. This paper explores the possibilities of examining undergraduate Geography dissertations as intellectual sources, recognising the dissertations as original pieces of academic research; cultural sources, examining the role of this "rite of passage" in the experience of becoming a geographer; and lastly, as social sources, whereby the dissertations illuminate a diverse, personal network within and beyond the university. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Response to the book forum on How China Escaped Shock Therapy.
- Author
-
Weber, Isabella M
- Subjects
SHOCK therapy ,INDUSTRIALISM ,HISTORY of geography ,ECONOMIC geography ,COASTAL development ,INTEGRATED coastal zone management - Abstract
This paper responds to the contributions to the review symposium on How China Escaped Shock Therapy. I discuss the strategy of economic system reform that started from the non-essential parts of the industrial system in order to eventually transform the commanding heights; the spatial dimension of reform in relation to "dual circulation" and the coastal development strategy; the nature and meaning of Chinese gradualism; and China's price stabilization strategies of the 1980s in relation to later inflationary challenges. Finally, I reflect on the symposium as a dialogue between economic geography and a history of ideas in action that I pursued in my book. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Conceptions of geography and history as school disciplines: an approach from lexical availability.
- Author
-
de la Montaña Conchiña, Juan Luis, de la Maya Retamar, Guadalupe, and López-Pérez, Magdalena
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,SCHOOL discipline ,PRIMARY schools ,SECONDARY schools ,HIGHER education ,SHARING ,SCHOOL shootings - Abstract
This paper aims to examine students' conceptions of Geography and History as school disciplines at different educational stages. The sample, composed by a total of 73 participants from Primary School (n =26), Secondary School (n =29) and Higher Education (n =18), completed a lexical availability test in Spanish and English or in Spanish and French. The results show that lexical availability increases as the educational stage increases, although the differences are not significant between all of them. The available lexical items on Geography and History, most of which are not shared between the different stages, are very generalist, showing a rigid and formal view of the disciplines. After the analysis carried out, we consider that lexical availability may constitute a valid tool for accessing students' conceptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Klaićev doprinos poznavanju geografije Bosne i Hercegovine.
- Author
-
PEKLIĆ, IVAN
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,GEOGRAPHY ,TOPOGRAPHY ,ETHNOLOGY ,POLITICIANS - Abstract
Copyright of Cris is the property of Historical Society of Krizevci and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
48. Geography and linguistics: Histories, entanglements and departures.
- Author
-
Jagessar, Philip
- Subjects
HISTORY of geography ,HISTORICAL geography ,LINGUISTICS ,WORLD War I ,FOREIGN language education - Abstract
Linguistic geography has been considered a part, if not a sub‐discipline, of linguistics rather than geography. This was not always the case. In the late 19th century geography was integral to linguistic science through the practice of language surveying and production of linguistic maps and atlases. By the early 20th century language became a geopolitical concern in Europe during and after the First World War. This paper argues that historical geography can make an important intervention in recovering the entwined yet forgotten histories of linguistics and geography and explain the roots of geography's indifference to linguistic study which has, among many issues, contributed to the marginalisation of other languages in favour of English. This paper traces the history of geography's association with language as a consequence of empire, colonialism and nationalism and considers the reasons for their divergence and why geography continues to have a significant role in linguistics but not vice‐versa. This paper concludes by reflecting on what historical geography brings to linguistic geography and how it can write about a significant, yet often forgotten, geographical tradition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The possibilities and limits of impact and engagement in research on military institutions.
- Author
-
Woodward, Rachel, Dawes, Antonia, Edmunds, Timothy, Higate, Paul, and Jenkings, K. Neil
- Subjects
MILITARY research ,CHILDREN of military personnel ,HISTORY of geography ,CORPORATE culture ,MILITARY reserve forces ,MILITARY personnel ,TRUCK maintenance & repair - Abstract
Military geographical research often requires direct engagement with military institutions. Although the morality of such engagements is often debated, the details of engagement in practice have been less scrutinised. Scrutiny is important, as military engagements can shape research‐derived critiques and can influence the communication of research outcomes to both military and academic research communities. Military engagement comprises the communication of data, theories, and concepts about military activities and phenomena, with military personnel and institutions, in textual, representational, and interpersonal modes. The paper examines Geography's history of research engagement to show the complexities and debates around this seemingly straightforward idea. It then introduces a research project and wider research programme on the UK armed forces reserves which provides the empirical context from which we draw our observations about military engagement. We then consider two issues, language and institutional cultures, for their insights into the complexities of military engagement. We conclude by considering the politics of engagement in contemporary critical military geographical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. First Evidence of Stage III Verbal Negation in Tunisian Coastal Dialects.
- Author
-
D'Anna, Luca
- Subjects
DIALECTS ,HISTORY of geography ,TUNISIANS ,AFRICAN history ,EVIDENCE - Abstract
The present paper provides a preliminary description of verbal negation in the two neighboring dialects of Mahdia and Chebba, belonging to the groups of Tunisian coastal village dialects. This dialectal group has been, so far, dramatically understudied, despite its importance for the dialectal geography and history of North African Arabic. Like most other varieties of Maghrebi Arabic, the dialects of Mahdia and Chebba underwent the so-called Jespersen's cycle, consisting in the doubling of the original prefixal negation, in dialectal Arabic mā (Stage I), with a suffixal negative particle -š , resulting in the circumfixal negation mā ... š (Stage II) and, eventually, in the loss of the prefixal mā (Stage III). With regard to Arabic, Stage III was so far undocumented in North Africa, with the exception of Maltese. This paper provides samples of the three different stages in the dialects under investigation and offers some hypotheses concerning the possible locus of innovation with regard to Tunisian, contributing to our knowledge of negation in North African Arabic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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