Geography 336-001 CULTURAL/HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY Winter 2013 Dr. R.W. Widdis Course Description: Theoretical and methodological approaches to the spatial-temporal expression of present geographical conditions. Emphasis on sources for reconstruction of past environments and analysing geographical change over time. Classroom: Class Times: Office: Phone Number: Email: Office Hours: CL 247 MWF 10:30-11:20 p.m. CL 340.2 585-4242 randy.widdis@uregina.ca MWF 2:30 – 4:00 p.m. Course Requirements: Research Theme Essay Book Review Final Exam Quiz (Section I) 40% 20% 25% 15% Readings: No text is required. A collection of readings is on reserve in the Map Library. Outline: I Introduction: Cultural Geography, Historical Geography, Cultural-Historical Geography, Culture History “What then is time? If no one asks me, I know. If I would want to explain it to a questioner I do not know.” St. Augustine “What time is this place?” Kevin Lynch 1. 2. “Time is nature’s way of keeping everything from happening at once.” Grafitti Definitions Past Traditions of Research and Recent Developments 3. Problems, Issues and Ongoing Debates (philosophies and methods) II Selected Research Themes 1. Location 2. Landscape 3. Environmental History and Historical Geography 4. Regions 5. Urbanization and Industrialization 6. Migration 7. Identity Formation and Nation-Building 8. Historical Geographies of Power and Control 9. Feminist Historical Geography 10. Applied Historical Geography 11. Geographical Information Systems and Historical Geography III Conclusion: The Relevance of Historical Geography LIST OF REQUIRED READINGS Section I 1. A. Baker, "In Pursuit of Wilbur Zelinsky and Other Historical Geographers," Historical Geography Newsletter 4, 1 (1974), 17-19. 2. R. Harris, "The Historical Mind," In D. Ley and M. Samuels, eds. Humanistic Geography: prospects and problems (Chicago: Maaroufa Press, 1978), 123-37. 3. J. Jakle, “In Pursuit of a Wild Goose: Historical Geography and the Geographic Past,” Historical Geography Newsletter 4, 1 (1974), 13-16. 4. D. Moodie, J. Lehr and J. Alwin, "Zelinsky's Product: Wild Goose or Canard?," Historical Geography Newsletter 4, 2 (1974), 18-21. 5. C. Sauer, “Forward to Historical Geography,” Presidential Address, Association of American Geographers, Annals of the Association of Geographers 31; 1 March 1941. 6. W. Zelinsky, "In Pursuit of Historical Geography and Other Wild Geese," Historical Geography Newsletter 3, 2 (1973), 1-5. 2 Section II Location 7. J.B. Harley, "Historical geography and the cartographic illusion," Journal of Historical Geography 15, 1 (1989) 80-91. 8. P. Hugill, “World-System Theory: where’s the theory?,” Journal of Historical Geography 23 (1997), 344-49. 9. N. Thrift and A. Pred, “Time Geography: a new beginning,” Progress in Human Geography 5 (1981), 277-86. Landscape 10. D. Cosgrove, “Place, landscape and the dialectics of cultural geography,” Canadian Geographer 22 (1978), 66-72. 11. P. Ennals and D. Holdsworth, "Vernacular Architecture and the Cultural Landscape of the Maritime Provinces: A Reconnaissance," Acadiensis 10, 2 (1981), 86-105. 12. R. Rees, "Images of the Prairie: landscape painting and perception in the western interior of Canada," Canadian Geographer 20, 3 (1976), 259-78. 13. R. Widdis. “The Murals of Moose Jaw: Commodification or Articulation of the Past?,” Historical Geography 28 (2000), 234-52. 14. R. Widdis, “Cultural Landscapes,” in B. Thraves et al., eds. Saskatchewan: Geographic Perspectives (Regina: CPRC, 2007), 157-169. Environmental History and Historical Geography 15. D. Demeritt, “Ecology, objectivity and critique in writings on nature and human societies,” Journal of Historical Geography 20, 1 (1994), 22-37. 16. J. Powell, “Historical geography and environmental history: an Australian interface,” Journal of Historical Geography 22, 3 (1996), 253-73. 17. M. Williams, “The relations of environmental history and historical geography,” Journal of Historical Geography 20, 1 (1994), 3-21. Regions 18. 19. D. Gregory, “The production of regions in England’s industrial region,” Journal of Historical Geography 14 (1988), 50-58. R. Harris, "Theory and Synthesis in Historical Geography,” Canadian Geographer, XV, 3 (1971), 157-72. Urbanization and Industrialization 20. R. Harris, “Industry and residence: The decentralization of New York City, 1900-1940,” Journal of Historical Geography 19, 2 (1993), 169-90. 21. D. Hiebert, “The social geography of Toronto in 1931: a study of residential differentiation and social structure”, Journal of Historical Geography 21, 1 (1995), 5574. 22. R. Lewis, “A city transformed: manufacturing districts and suburban growth in Montreal, 1850-1929,” Journal of Historical Geography 27, 1 (2001), 20-35. 3 23. E. Muller, “Industrial suburbs and the growth of metropolitan Pittsburgh, 1870-1920,” Journal of Historical Geography 27, 1 (2001), 58-73. Migration 24. D. Arreola, “Mexico origins of South Texas Mexican Americans, 1930,” Journal of Historical Geography 19, 1 (1993), 48-63. 25. R. Widdis, “’We Breathe the Same Air’: Eastern Ontarian Migration to Watertown, New York In The Late Nineteenth Century,” New York History LXVIII, 3 (1987), 261-80. 26. R. Widdis, "Scale and Context: Approaches to the Study of Canadian Migration Patterns in the Nineteenth Century", Social Science History 12, 3 (1988), 269-303. 27. R. Widdis, “Borderland Interaction in the International Region of the Great Plains: A Historic-Geographical Perspective,” Great Plains Research 7, 1 (1997), 103-37. Identity Formation and Nation-Building 28. C. Brace, “Looking back: the Cotswolds and English national identity, c. 1890-1950,” Journal of Historical Geography 25, 4 (1999), 502-16. 29. F. Kashani-Sabet, “Picturing the homeland: geography and national identity in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Iran,” Journal of Historical Geography 24, 4 (1998), 413-30. 30. B. Osborne, “Constructing landscapes of power: the George Etienne Cartier monument, Montreal,” Journal of Historical Geography 24, 4 (1998), 431-58. 31. R. Widdis, “Borders, Borderlands and Canadian Identity: A Canadian Perspective,” International Journal of Canadian Studies 15 (1997), 49-66. Feminist Historical Geography 32. J. Kay, “Landscapes of Women and Men: rethinking the regional historical geography of the United States and Canada,” Journal of Historical Geography 17 (1991), 435-52. 4 ASSIGNMENTS 1. Book Review Assignment (15%) Due: March 15, 2013 Penalty for later submission: 5% off per day. NO EXCUSES. Choose a book from the list below (or a book of your choice pending approval by the instructor) and address the following questions in your review (3-5 pages, double-spaced). While it is acceptable to read other reviews of the book you have chosen, the assignment will be assessed primarily on the basis of your opinions, summary and input. Plagiarism will not be tolerated. What is the author setting out to accomplish? What philosophy/ies direct the research? What is her or his argument? On what data sets and/or theories does the author rely? What methodologies does the author employ? What are the major findings? What are the strengths and weaknesses of the text? List: Stephen Hornsby Nineteenth Century Cape Breton Ronald Rees New and Naked Land: Making the Prairies Home Donna Haraway Reinventing Nature: Simians, Cyborgs and Women Donald Meinig The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History, vol. 1, Atlantic America, 1491-1800. Roderick Nash Wilderness and the American Mind. John Jakle The American Small Town: Twentieth Century Place Images. John Hart The Look of the Land. John Stilgoe Common Landscape of America. John Jackson Discovering the Vernacular Landscape. David Ward Cities and Immigrants: A Geography of Change in Nineteenth Century America. Allan Pred Urban Growth and the Circulation of Information: The United States System of Cities, 1790-1840. William Cronon Changes in the Land: Indians, Colonists, and the Ecology of New England. James Lemon The Best Poor Man’s Country: A Geographical Study of Early Southeastern Pennsylvania. James Vance Jr. The Merchant’s World: The Geography of Wholesaling. James Shortridge The Middle West: It’s Meaning in American Culture. Richard White The Roots of Dependency: Subsistence, Environment and Social Change Among the Choctaws, Pawnees, and Navajos. David Wishart The Fur Trade of the American West, 1807-1840: A Geographical Synthesis. Donald Meinig The Great Columbia Plain: A Historical Geography, 1805-1910. 5 John Bodnar The Transplanted: A History of Immigrants in Urban America. Andrew Clark Three Centuries and the Island: A Historical Geography of Settlement and Agriculture in Prince Edward Island R.A. Dodgshon Society in Time and Space: A Geographical Perspective on Change Derek Gregory Regional Transformation and Industrial Revolution: A Geography of the Yorkshire Woollen Industry R. Cole Harris The Resettlement of British Columbia: Essays on Colonialism and Geographical Change C.J. Houston and W.J. Smyth The Sash Canada Wore: A Historical Geography of the Orange Order in Canada David Lowenthal The Past is a Foreign Country Gabriel Lanier, The Delaware Valley in the Early Republic J. Bukowczyk, N. Faires, D. Smith, and R. W. Widdis, Permeable Border: The Great Lakes Basin as Transnational Region, 1650-1990 Randy Widdis, With Scarcely A Ripple: Anglo-Canadian Migration into the United States and Western Canada, 1880-1920 2. Major Paper (40%) Research Essay on a Topic of Your Choice Due: April 10, 2013 Penalty for later submission: 10% off per day. NO EXCUSES. Instructions: The following assignment is designed to give you experience in preparing a research paper in historical geography. To this end, I would like you to prepare a paper that relates to one of the themes covered in the course. Primary research in historical geography involves long and painstaking work in archives and libraries and so this essay should rely primarily on secondary literature that is relevant to your chosen topic. The completed project will be the submission of a paper not less than 3500 words (15 pages) and not more than 5000 words (20 pages). Papers should include a title, bibliography and appropriate maps, charts, tables, etc. Tenets of scholarship MUST be adhered to; that is, footnotes should be executed properly (at the foot of the page or at the end of the paper), there should be a bibliography at the end of the paper, etc. PLAGIARISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED. Assessment will be based largely on the following criteria: (a) thoroughness of research on bibliography; (b) explanation of concepts, themes, ideas encountered in readings or mentioned in class; (c) originality of thought (always identify ‘borrowings’ by footnotes); (d) choice of relevance of maps, diagrams, illustrations, etc.; (e) style of writing and quality of the overall project. 6 Resources –periodicals (e.g. Historical Geography, The Journal of Historical Geography) books, newspapers and reference materials (e.g. ELECTRONIC RESOURCES, GEOBASE, CANADIAN PERIODICAL INDEX) in the library, economic and historical atlases. LIMIT INTERNET REFERENCES TO NO MORE THAN 25% OF YOUR TOTAL SOURCES (this does not include articles obtained from online journals). 7