Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Geography === John Harrington, Jr. === Geographers, as part of their work as scholars and academics, continually “do” geography. Geography is practiced as research when tools, perspectives, and techniques are applied to problems or areas of study, exploring, u...

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Main Author: Gerike, Matthew J.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15043
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-150432017-03-03T15:44:52Z Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges Gerike, Matthew J. Geography History of geography Cultural geography Human geography Textbooks Geographical knowledges Geography (0366) Doctor of Philosophy Department of Geography John Harrington, Jr. Geographers, as part of their work as scholars and academics, continually “do” geography. Geography is practiced as research when tools, perspectives, and techniques are applied to problems or areas of study, exploring, understanding, and building geographical information. Geography is practiced as a social discipline when geographers interact with those around them, sharing geographical knowledge through writing, publishing, presenting, teaching, and discussion so others can read, listen, and engage. In doing geography – continuously practicing research and engaging in the documentation and communication of geographical knowledge – geographers also actively continuously construct the history of geography. These incidences, slides, and pages of knowledges are the foundation and structure of geography as a practiced discipline. Research explored the historiographies of geographical knowledges in presidential addresses of the Association of American Geographers, thematic conceptualizations of the subfield of cultural geography, and representation of women across editions of introductory human geography textbooks through content analysis and spatial. Conclusions strongly support the contention that geographic knowledges and the nature of geographic thought actively evolve as contemporary scholars practice their profession. By paying attention to these constructive processes and understanding their interactive role in it, geographers are better informed of the history of their specialty and their direct and vested role in the enterprise. 2012-11-26T21:12:06Z 2012-11-26T21:12:06Z 2012-11-26 2012 December Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15043 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Geography
History of geography
Cultural geography
Human geography
Textbooks
Geographical knowledges
Geography (0366)
spellingShingle Geography
History of geography
Cultural geography
Human geography
Textbooks
Geographical knowledges
Geography (0366)
Gerike, Matthew J.
Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Geography === John Harrington, Jr. === Geographers, as part of their work as scholars and academics, continually “do” geography. Geography is practiced as research when tools, perspectives, and techniques are applied to problems or areas of study, exploring, understanding, and building geographical information. Geography is practiced as a social discipline when geographers interact with those around them, sharing geographical knowledge through writing, publishing, presenting, teaching, and discussion so others can read, listen, and engage. In doing geography – continuously practicing research and engaging in the documentation and communication of geographical knowledge – geographers also actively continuously construct the history of geography. These incidences, slides, and pages of knowledges are the foundation and structure of geography as a practiced discipline. Research explored the historiographies of geographical knowledges in presidential addresses of the Association of American Geographers, thematic conceptualizations of the subfield of cultural geography, and representation of women across editions of introductory human geography textbooks through content analysis and spatial. Conclusions strongly support the contention that geographic knowledges and the nature of geographic thought actively evolve as contemporary scholars practice their profession. By paying attention to these constructive processes and understanding their interactive role in it, geographers are better informed of the history of their specialty and their direct and vested role in the enterprise.
author Gerike, Matthew J.
author_facet Gerike, Matthew J.
author_sort Gerike, Matthew J.
title Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
title_short Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
title_full Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
title_fullStr Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
title_full_unstemmed Explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
title_sort explorations in historiographies of geographical knowledges
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/15043
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