Emergence of Geographical Science in 19th Century: Flashcards

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1
Q

Why study the histories of geography?

A
  • Livingstone (1992) - ‘the history of geography is the history of a contested tradition’
  • theory is understood as
    + ‘patterns or ideas’
    + ‘more or less organised ways of ordering the world’ …
    + ‘set of interlinked propositions about how things in the world are connected’
  • geographical theories and concepts have changed, evolved and transformed over time.
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2
Q

Learned societies:

A
  • one way in which the emergence of geography came into existence is through the establishment of learned societies in the early 19th century.
  • ‘they act as places of exchange and debate where information can be analysed and synthesised’ (Driver 2001).
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3
Q

Examples of learned societies:

A
  • 1821: Societe de Geographie de Paris (Paris - SGP).
  • 1828: Berlin Geographical Society (GEB)
  • 1830: Royal Geographical Society (London - RGS)
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4
Q

Age of Exploration:

A
  • begins in the late 15th century:
    + 1492-1504: Columbus attempts to find a western route to India.
    + 1498 - Vasco de Gama reaches India via the Cape of Good Hope.
    + 1521: Magellan circumnavigates the globe.
  • whether the Atlantic was navigable were questions that could not be solved through rereading Aristotle but instead through honest-to-goodness experience.
  • ‘the fact that geography has always been a practical science is thus of central significance in its history (Livingstone 1992)
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5
Q

The task of a geographer in 17th century:

A
  • ‘engage actively in the endless loop of feedback and correction’ (Brook 2009).
  • information would be brought back by merchants which would be collected, analysed and synthesised into sea charts/maps.
  • the merchants would then use this useful info/knowledge to go back into the wider world that is now better understood.
  • if this fails, new knowledge will be collected/incorporated.
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6
Q

Geography, Exploration and Enlightenment:

A
  • 1734: French Academicians, including Pierre Bouguer and Charles-Marie de La Condamine led a scientific mission to South America.
  • their aim was to determine the shape of the earth.
  • Academicians included physicists, cartographers, soldiers, scientists and geographers.
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7
Q

What did they do?

A
  • mapped the western coast pf Peru, Quito and other places
  • discovered rubber, platinum and quinine
  • documented corruption in the Viceroyalty
  • collected fauna and flora
  • they conducted experiments on the speed of sound, magnetism and gravity
  • proved the shape of the earth was oblate (Crane 2021).
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8
Q

Exploration and Empire - 18th Century:

A
  • European exploration of the globe accelerated in pace and scope.
  • e.g., Captain James Cook.
  • scientific expedition, gathering detailed info on landscapes, weather, fauna and flora, etc.
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9
Q

3 voyages - exploration and empire (18th Century):

A
  • South Pacific, HMS Endeavour, 1768-1771
  • Australia 1772-1775
    North America, 1776-1780
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10
Q

Exploration and Empire in the 19th Century:

A
  • emergence of Geography as a subject is inseparable from the rise of the European Imperialism in the 19th Century.
  • ‘the overseas adventure of expansionist Britain in 19th century was orchestrated through the agency of the RGS’ ‘Geography was the science of imperialism par excellence’.
  • geography both enabled empire and benefitted from it - gaining prestige and authority as a (scientific) subject.
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11
Q

How did modern western geography arise during this period?

A
  • the need to catalogue and interpret the mass of geographical information collected.
  • the use of rational, scientific forms of thinking and expression to organise this data.
    (Richard Peet 1998)
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12
Q

Who were two of the most influential and pioneering geographers?

A
  • both ‘naturalists’
  • Alexander von Humboldt
  • Charles Darwin
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13
Q

Who was von Humboldt?

A
  • traveller and scientific explorer (South America - 1799-1804).
  • extensive collector and field observer, meteorology, hydrology, geology, etc.
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14
Q

Who was Charles Darwin?

A
  • Best remembered for Origin of Species (1859) and ‘theory of evolution’, his work was crucial for the growth of modern geographical science.
  • supported and recognised by RGS.
  • Darwin makes scientific observations; returns with 1,500 species
  • Evolution and adaptation offered a whole new way of thinking about how people and environments interact. Move away from creationism and theological explanations.
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15
Q

Geography as a university subject:

A
  • evolution and advances in time and change in the environment helped to establish a recognisable modern scientific type of geography.
  • 19th century: when sciences as we know them today, incl geography were first defined and differentiated.
  • by the end of the 19th century - professors of geography at universities and geography programmes at school. E.g. Carl Ritter at University of Berlin.
  • Cresswell: ‘it was in Germany, or Prussia, that geography flourished in the early 19th century’. Due to Humboldt and Ritter.
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16
Q

Decolonising Geography:

A
  • Much recent geographical research and writing has reflected upon how the subject might deal with its historical complicity in processes such as imperialism, racism and oppression.
  • e.g., In 2017, the RGS Annual Conference took as it’s theme, ‘Decolonising Geographical Knowledges’.
  • ‘Despite the end of formal colonial rule, our understandings of the world – about space, environment, nature, economy, democracy, cities, education, culture, and so on – often unconsciously and implicitly reflect enduring colonial legacies’.
17
Q

Conclusion:

A
  • modern subject of geography emerged in Europe and N. America throughput 19th century. This was first in forms of learned societies and then in universities and schools.
  • impelled by the growth in geographical knowledge produced via exploration.
  • growth is also linked to the rise of a more secular, scientific world-view.
  • complicit with European empire building, colonialism.