ABSTRACT

The past decade has witnessed a remarkable resurgence in the intellectual interplay between geography and the humanities in both academic and public circles. The metaphors and concepts of geography now permeate literature, philosophy and the arts. Concepts such as space, place, landscape, mapping and territory have become pervasive as conceptual frameworks and core metaphors in recent publications by humanities scholars and well-known writers.

Envisioning Landscapes, Making Worlds contains over twenty-five contributions from leading scholars who have engaged this vital intellectual project from various perspectives, both inside and outside of the field of geography. The book is divided into four sections representing different modes of examining the depth and complexity of human meaning invested in maps, attached to landscapes, and embedded in the spaces and places of modern life. The topics covered range widely and include interpretations of space, place, and landscape in literature and the visual arts, philosophical reflections on geographical knowledge, cultural imagination in scientific exploration and travel accounts, and expanded geographical understanding through digital and participatory methodologies. The clashing and blending of cultures caused by globalization and the new technologies that profoundly alter human environmental experience suggest new geographical narratives and representations that are explored here by a multidisciplinary group of authors.

This book is essential reading for students, scholars, and interested general readers seeking to understand the new synergies and creative interplay emerging from this broad intellectual engagement with meaning and geographic experience.

part |61 pages

Mapping

part |78 pages

Reflecting

chapter 7|9 pages

Do Places have Edges?

A Geo-Philosophical Inquiry

chapter 8|10 pages

Race, Mobility and the Humanities

A Geosophical Approach

chapter 9|10 pages

The World in Plain View

chapter 10|12 pages

Courtly Geography

Nature, Authority and Civility in Early Eighteenth-Century France

chapter 11|12 pages

Darwinian Landscapes

chapter 13|14 pages

The Good Inherit the Earth

part |96 pages

Representing

chapter 15|15 pages

Great Balls of Fire

Envisioning the Brilliant Meteor of 1783

chapter 16|7 pages

Reading Landscapes and Telling Stories

Geography, the Humanities and Environmental History

chapter 17|11 pages

Participatory Historical Geography?

Shaping and Failing to Shape Social Memory at an Oklahoma Monument

chapter 18|10 pages

Still-Life, After-Life, Nature Morte

W.G. Sebald and the Demands of Landscape

chapter 19|11 pages

The Texture of Space

Desire and Displacement in Hiroshi Teshigahara's Woman of the Dunes [Suna no Onna]

chapter 20|18 pages

Restoration

Synoptic Reflections

chapter 21|10 pages

Overlapping Ambiguities, Disciplinary Perspectives, and Metaphors of Looking

Reflections on a Landscape Photograph

part |74 pages

Performing

chapter 22|8 pages

Inverting Perspective

Icons' Performative Geographies

chapter 23|9 pages

Literary Geography

The Novel as a Spatial Event

chapter 24|13 pages

Materializing Vision

Performing a High-Rise View

chapter 25|11 pages

Technician of Light

Patrick Geddes and the Optic of Geography

chapter 26|7 pages

Deserted Places, Remote Voices

Performing Landscape

chapter 27|6 pages

Photography and its Circulations

chapter 28|6 pages

Beyond the Power of Art to Represent? 1

Narratives and Performances of the Arctic in the 1630s

chapter 29|12 pages

Navigating the Northwest Passage