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Book

Civic Discipline

Book

Civic Discipline

DOI link for Civic Discipline

Civic Discipline book

Geography in America, 1860-1890

Civic Discipline

DOI link for Civic Discipline

Civic Discipline book

Geography in America, 1860-1890
ByKaren M. Morin
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2011
eBook Published 31 May 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315572222
Pages 258
eBook ISBN 9781315572222
Subjects Geography, Humanities, Social Sciences
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Morin, K.M. (2011). Civic Discipline: Geography in America, 1860-1890 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315572222

ABSTRACT

The American Geographical Society was the pre-eminent geographical society in the nineteenth-century U.S. This book explores how geographical knowledge and practices took shape as a civic enterprise, under the leadership of Charles P. Daly, AGS president for 35 years (1864-1899). The ideals and programmatic interests of the AGS link to broad institutional, societal, and spatial contexts that drove interest in geography itself in the post-Civil War period, and also link to Charles Daly's personal role as New York civic leader, scholar, revered New York judge, and especially, popularizer of geography. Daly's leadership in a number of civic and social reform causes resonated closely with his work as geographer, such as his influence in tenement housing and street sanitation reform in New York City. Others of his projects served commercial interests, including in American railroad development and colonization of the African Congo. Daly was also New York's most influential access point to the Arctic in the latter nineteenth century. Through telling the story of the nineteenth-century AGS and Charles Daly, this book provides a critical appraisal of the role of particular actors, institutions, and practices involved in the development and promotion of geography in the mid-nineteenth century U.S. that is long overdue.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|28 pages

Introduction: Geography as Civic Discipline in Nineteenth-Century America

chapter 2|32 pages

Charles P. Daly’s Gendered Geography

chapter 3|32 pages

New York City’s Friend of Labor: Geography and Urban Social Reform

chapter 4|34 pages

Transporting American Empire: Rails, Canals, and the Politics of the “Geo-Personal”

chapter 5|36 pages

Arctic Science and the “Jurist-Geographer”

chapter 6|36 pages

“Geographical Exploration is Commercial Progress”: In the Congo

chapter 7|16 pages

Postscript: Reclaiming Charles P. Daly, Prospects and Problems

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