Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas
It began at a Christmas party, probably in 2002. I was describing my travels in the Himalayas to a geographer colleague, and he mentioned their importance in regulating world climate patterns. That led to further conversations in the following years, and we finally decided to propose an actual class...
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doaj-a4a22dd4098743f4b89274a8301a2ded2020-11-24T23:59:46ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesThe ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts1943-99381943-99462010-10-01181757910.16995/ane.199100Envisioning and Re-envisioning the HimalayasJames G. Lochtefeld0Carthage CollegeIt began at a Christmas party, probably in 2002. I was describing my travels in the Himalayas to a geographer colleague, and he mentioned their importance in regulating world climate patterns. That led to further conversations in the following years, and we finally decided to propose an actual class. For 15 years the Carthage curriculum has had an interdisciplinary requirement, which since 2005 students have satisfied by taking a “Carthage Symposium,” a team-taught class involving faculty from different disciplines. Our class examined the cultural, natural, and human geography connected with three Hindu pilgrimage sites—two at 10,500 feet and one at nearly 12,000. The initial course plan included half a dozen hikes, usually around nine miles—partly to get students outdoors and give them firsthand cultural exposure, but also because some of these sites still lack road access. The class ran in summer 2006 and summer 2009, each time with a colleague who had never been to India, and comparing the two experiences produced some insights on preparing a “newbie” colleague that I hope will be helpful to others. I offer them below, each with a summarizing principle.http://www.asianetworkexchange.org/articles/199 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
James G. Lochtefeld |
spellingShingle |
James G. Lochtefeld Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas The ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts |
author_facet |
James G. Lochtefeld |
author_sort |
James G. Lochtefeld |
title |
Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas |
title_short |
Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas |
title_full |
Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas |
title_fullStr |
Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas |
title_full_unstemmed |
Envisioning and Re-envisioning the Himalayas |
title_sort |
envisioning and re-envisioning the himalayas |
publisher |
Open Library of Humanities |
series |
The ASIANetwork Exchange: A Journal for Asian Studies in the Liberal Arts |
issn |
1943-9938 1943-9946 |
publishDate |
2010-10-01 |
description |
It began at a Christmas party, probably in 2002. I was describing my travels in the Himalayas to a geographer colleague, and he mentioned their importance in regulating world climate patterns. That led to further conversations in the following years, and we finally decided to propose an actual class. For 15 years the Carthage curriculum has had an interdisciplinary requirement, which since 2005 students have satisfied by taking a “Carthage Symposium,” a team-taught class involving faculty from different disciplines. Our class examined the cultural, natural, and human geography connected with three Hindu pilgrimage sites—two at 10,500 feet and one at nearly 12,000. The initial course plan included half a dozen hikes, usually around nine miles—partly to get students outdoors and give them firsthand cultural exposure, but also because some of these sites still lack road access. The class ran in summer 2006 and summer 2009, each time with a colleague who had never been to India, and comparing the two experiences produced some insights on preparing a “newbie” colleague that I hope will be helpful to others. I offer them below, each with a summarizing principle. |
url |
http://www.asianetworkexchange.org/articles/199 |
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