Foundations of Geographical Thought

Similar documents
GEOG 473/573: Intermediate Geographic Information Systems Department of Geography Minnesota State University, Mankato

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

PSYC 2700H-B: INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus

SPM 5309: SPORT MARKETING Fall 2017 (SEC. 8695; 3 credits)

Physics XL 6B Reg# # Units: 5. Office Hour: Tuesday 5 pm to 7:30 pm; Wednesday 5 pm to 6:15 pm

Philosophy 301L: Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2012

ACADEMIC POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

Gonzaga-in-Florence. HIST 390 -ANCIENT ROME Spring 2017 M. & W. 2:00 P.M. - 3:25 P.M. COURSE DESCRIPTION

Class Mondays & Wednesdays 11:00 am - 12:15 pm Rowe 161. Office Mondays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205

Introduction to Sociology SOCI 1101 (CRN 30025) Spring 2015

HIST 3300 HISTORIOGRAPHY & METHODS Kristine Wirts

International Environmental Policy Spring :374:315:01 Tuesdays, 10:55 am to 1:55 pm, Blake 131

Business Finance 3400 Introduction to Real Estate Autumn Semester, 2017

Our Hazardous Environment

CHMB16H3 TECHNIQUES IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

PSY 1012 General Psychology. Course Policies and Syllabus

American Literature: Major Authors Epistemology: Religion, Nature, and Democracy English 2304 Mr. Jeffrey Bilbro MWF

Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006

ANTH 101: INTRODUCTION TO PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY

TCH_LRN 531 Frameworks for Research in Mathematics and Science Education (3 Credits)

INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOCY 1001, Spring Semester 2013

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP

DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND CLASSICS Academic Year , Classics 104 (Summer Term) Introduction to Ancient Rome

Name: Giovanni Liberatore NYUHome Address: Office Hours: by appointment Villa Ulivi Office Extension: 312

Marketing Management MBA 706 Mondays 2:00-4:50

BUSINESS FINANCE 4239 Risk Management

University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education Program Evaluation Spring Online

PHILOSOPHY & CULTURE Syllabus

Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB

RL17501 Inventing Modern Literature: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and XIV Century Florence 3 credits Spring 2014

BIOL Nutrition and Diet Therapy Blinn College-Bryan Campus Course Syllabus Spring 2011

General Chemistry II, CHEM Blinn College Bryan Campus Course Syllabus Fall 2011

Course Syllabus It is the responsibility of each student to carefully review the course syllabus. The content is subject to revision with notice.

COURSE WEBSITE:

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

COMMUNICATION AND JOURNALISM Introduction to Communication Spring 2010

Cleveland State University Introduction to University Life Course Syllabus Fall ASC 101 Section:

Introduction to Personality Daily 11:00 11:50am

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

Syllabus: Introduction to Philosophy

BUSINESS FINANCE 4265 Financial Institutions

Introduction to Forensic Drug Chemistry

IDS 240 Interdisciplinary Research Methods

FIN 571 International Business Finance

International Humanitarian Assistance AEB 4282 Section 11FA 3 credits Spring Semester, 2013

THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO. Department of Psychology

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

Course Policies and Syllabus BUL3130 The Legal, Ethical, and Social Aspects of Business Syllabus Spring A 2017 ONLINE

COMM370, Social Media Advertising Fall 2017

Nutrition 10 Contemporary Nutrition WINTER 2016

General Microbiology (BIOL ) Course Syllabus

Syllabus CHEM 2230L (Organic Chemistry I Laboratory) Fall Semester 2017, 1 semester hour (revised August 24, 2017)

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006

Intermediate Academic Writing

ECON 442: Economic Development Course Syllabus Second Semester 2009/2010

Adler Graduate School

Foothill College Fall 2014 Math My Way Math 230/235 MTWThF 10:00-11:50 (click on Math My Way tab) Math My Way Instructors:

Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352

CS 100: Principles of Computing

Academic Success at Ohio State. Caroline Omolesky Program Officer for Sponsored Programs and Academic Liaison Office of International Affairs

TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM

Class Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1:45 pm Friday 107. Office Tuesdays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

SOC 1500 (Introduction to Rural Sociology)

LEAD 612 Advanced Qualitative Research Fall 2015 Dr. Lea Hubbard Camino Hall 101A

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

LIN 6520 Syntax 2 T 5-6, Th 6 CBD 234

SYLLABUS FOR HISTORY 4362 FORMERLY HISTORY 4353 THE HISTORY OF MEXICAN CULTURE FALL, 2015

Syllabus: PHI 2010, Introduction to Philosophy

Course Name: Elementary Calculus Course Number: Math 2103 Semester: Fall Phone:

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

Corporate Communication

CHEM 6487: Problem Seminar in Inorganic Chemistry Spring 2010

Counseling 150. EOPS Student Readiness and Success

ANT4034: HISTORY OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY Spring 2014 Syllabus

Syllabus for PRP 428 Public Relations Case Studies 3 Credit Hours Fall 2012

PSCH 312: Social Psychology

CMST 2060 Public Speaking

Course Syllabus p. 1. Introduction to Web Design AVT 217 Spring 2017 TTh 10:30-1:10, 1:30-4:10 Instructor: Shanshan Cui

Northeastern University Online Course Syllabus

Indigenous Thought in Latin American Philosophy (Phil 607) Graduate Seminar Fall 2016, Prof. Alejandro A. Vallega SC 250C, M-W 16:00-17:50

MTH 141 Calculus 1 Syllabus Spring 2017

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

Philosophy in Literature: Italo Calvino (Phil. 331) Fall 2014, M and W 12:00-13:50 p.m.; 103 PETR. Professor Alejandro A. Vallega.

Instructor Experience and Qualifications Professor of Business at NDNU; Over twenty-five years of experience in teaching undergraduate students.

The Policymaking Process Course Syllabus

CHEM 1105: SURVEY OF GENERAL CHEMISTRY LABORATORY COURSE INFORMATION

INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015

Soil & Water Conservation & Management Soil 4308/7308 Course Syllabus: Spring 2008

Fall, 2011 Office: Anderson 626 Instructor: Shigenori Nagatomo Office Phone:

Medical Terminology - Mdca 1313 Course Syllabus: Summer 2017

POLITICAL SCIENCE 315 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Syllabus Foundations of Finance Summer 2014 FINC-UB

ANT 3520 (Online) Skeleton Keys: Introduction to Forensic Anthropology Spring 2015

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

Transcription:

Geography 8100 Wednesdays, 2:15-5:00 PM Spring semester 2017 Derby Hall 1116 Foundations of Geographical Thought aka Development of Geographic Thought Professor: Joel Wainwright Email: wainwright.11@osu.edu Office: 1169 Derby Hall Office hours: After seminar & by appt. This seminar is devoted to excavating and defining the foundations of contemporary geographical thought. We ask: what does it mean to think geographically? What constitutes geographical thought? How can we define geographical thought when its practitioners think and do such diverse things? How do we locate truth geographically? To answer these questions our seminar will undertake a critical and historical analysis of core geographical concepts: space, spatiality, place, science, discourse, difference, capital, empire, and climate change. We begin by reading a trio of philosophical accounts of space and place by Aristotle, Kant, and Hegel and then consider how these were reworked in the formation of the modern discipline. We then put contemporary geographical texts in conversation with canonical texts by reading pairwise. We conclude by examining two contemporary debates about geographical thought: one concerning the role of the military in geographical research; another on the relevance of geography in an era of anthropogenic climate change. Our reading plan is outlined on page three. Additional details on each week s assigned and recommended readings will be clarified at the end of each seminar meeting. Course requirements Your grade will be comprised of the following: Attendance and participation 20 % In-class presentations (2 x 15%) 30 % Papers (2 x 25%) 50 % As an advanced reading seminar we will read 100-200 pages of challenging material each week. Our success is dependent upon careful and thorough reading, so come to class prepared. Attendance and participation are required and will be graded. 1

Participation is principally measured by the quality of your contributions to our discussions. (If you cannot attend class because of illness, you must bring a signed note from a doctor excusing you from class.) There are two assigned textbooks: 1. R. Johnston and J. Sidaway (2016) Geography & Geographers, Seventh ed. NY: Routledge. 2. D. Gregory et al. (2009) The Dictionary of Human Geography, 5 th edition. London: Wiley. Additional reading assignments will be made available via Carmen. Apart from the readings, there are two assignments: (1) a pair of seminar presentations, to be arranged at the end of the first class meeting; (2) a pair of short papers, due March 4 and April 23. (Further details on these assignments will be provided in class.) 2

Course plan at a glance # Date Topic canonical texts contemporary readings G&g ch. DoHG concepts 1 11-Jan seminar introduction 2 18-Jan what is 'geographic thought'? Pref & 1 geographical imaginary, geography, geography history of, human geography, methodology, philosophy 3 25-Jan humans, nature, & geography Hartshorne, Sauer, Bowman 2 Berkeley school, cultural landscape, landscape, Landschaft, nature, possibilism, region 4 1-Feb philosophy of space 1 Aristotle, Kant, Hegel epistemology, idealism, Kantianism, materialism, ontology, space, spatiality 5 8-Feb philosophy of space 2 Aristotle, Kant Massey 6 15-Feb spatial/quantitation revolution Taafe Harvey (1969) selection 3 & 4 central place theory, distance decay, location theory, positivism, quantitative revolution, spatial analysis, spatial science 7 22-Feb science Gramsci Harvey (1972) falsification, laboratory, law (scientific), paradigm, science, situated knowledge 8 1-Mar postcolonialism Said Ismail 7 difference, essentialism, Other, post-colonialism, post-structuralism 9 8-Mar feminism Butler Nagar 8 subject, text, feminist geographies, positionality 15-Mar Spring break, no seminar meeting Part 2 10 22-Mar state and capital Karatani 6 accumulation, capital, capitalism, class, commodity, labor process, labor theory of value, Marxist geography 11 29-Mar empire * Karatani colonialism, contrapuntal geog, empire, hegemony, imaginative geographies, imperialism, occupation military 12 5-Apr AAG meeting, no seminar meeting 13 12-Apr state/military and geography Bowman, Smith Dobson, Wainwright American empire, disciplinary power, empiricism, exploration, fieldwork, geographical imagination, Pax Americana 14 19-Apr Anthropocene, climate, & 'relevance' N/a TBD 9 environmental security, oil, petro-capitalism, political ecology, possibilism, posthumanism, production of nature 21-Apr paper 2 due at 2 pm 3

Seminar presentations Each week our discussion will begin with one or two presentations on the assigned texts. Each student will give two such presentations. Your presentations should do three things: 1. situate our readings by offering a brief abstract of the texts we have read; 2. present us with your critical reflections on the texts; 3. offer ~3 questions to structure our seminar discussion (please bring copies of your questions for the other seminar participants). Presentations should last ~10 minutes. I strongly encourage you to take this opportunity to practice formal presentation of ideas by writing out your remarks in advance. Short papers You will write two critical reflection essays. These papers (~ 2,000 words) should discuss one or two of the texts and concepts that we have studied in the seminar. Each essay must provide a concise analytic summary of any text you discuss, as well as your own critical analysis of the central argument of the given text. Critical analysis requires thoughtful reflection. A strong essay is well-written (and therefore entertaining) and provides constructive criticism, i.e., a critical analysis of the argument. Your essays should use formal presentation (double-spaced, 12-point font). When you refer to a text, be sure to cite it properly. Your papers may be turned in paper copies only, please at any time before the due date. Fine print : turning in work, plagiarism, and so on Because many of us are easily distracted by the use of cell phones, computers, recording devices, and the like, such equipment should be turned off and put away during class. Late work loses ten percentage points per day. For instance, a paper that is turned in six days late but would have otherwise received a score of 90/100 would be worth 30/100. Grading options for the course are A,A-,B+,B,B-,C+,C,C-,D+,D, E. An I, or Incomplete, will only be given under special circumstances and where the instructor has made an arrangement with the student before the end of the final week of the quarter. If you wish to request an I, be prepared to explain (a) why an Incomplete is an appropriate grade option under the circumstances, and (b) how and when you will complete the incomplete. Any academic misconduct, such as plagiarizing, will be reported to Ohio State s Office of Academic Affairs, Committee on Academic Misconduct (COAM). They have prepared the following statement on academic integrity (see below). Please read it carefully. Accommodation will be made for any student with special needs based on the impact of a disability. Please contact the instructor and also the Office for Disability Services at 292-3307 (150 Pomerene). 4

Ten Suggestions for Preserving Academic Integrity Ohio State Office of Academic Affairs, Committee on Academic Misconduct Academic integrity is essential to maintaining an environment that fosters excellence in teaching, research, and other educational and scholarly activities. Thus, students are expected to complete all academic and scholarly assignments with fairness and honesty. The following suggestions will help you preserve academic integrity [ ]. 1. ACKNOWLEDGE THE SOURCES THAT YOU USE WHEN COMPLETING ASSIGNMENTS: If you use another person's thoughts, ideas, or words in your work, you must acknowledge this fact. This applies regardless of whose thoughts, ideas, or words you use as well as the source of the information. If you do not acknowledge the work of others, you are implying that another person's work is your own, and such actions constitute plagiarism. Plagiarism is the theft of another s intellectual property [ ]. 2. AVOID SUSPICIOUS BEHAVIOR: Do not put yourself in a position where an instructor might suspect that you are cheating or that you have cheated. Even if you have not cheated, the mere suspicion of dishonesty might undermine an instructor's confidence in your work. Avoiding some of the most common types of suspicious behavior is simple. Before an examination, check your surroundings carefully and make sure that all of your notes are put away and your books are closed. An errant page of notes on the floor or an open book could be construed as a cheat sheet. Keep your eyes on your own work. [ ] 3. DO NOT FABRICATE INFORMATION: Never make-up data, literature citations, experimental results, or any other type of information that is used in an academic or scholarly assignment. 4. DO NOT FALSIFY ANY TYPE OF RECORD: Do not alter, misuse, produce, or reproduce any University form or document or other type of form or document. Do not sign another person's name to any form or record (University or otherwise), and do not sign your name to any form or record that contains inaccurate or fraudulent information. Once an assignment has been graded and returned to you, do not alter it and ask that it be graded again. [ ] 5. DO NOT GIVE IN TO PEER PRESSURE: Friends can be a tremendous help to one another when studying for exams or completing course assignments. However, don't let your friendships with others jeopardize your college career. Before lending or giving any type of information to a friend or acquaintance, consider carefully what you are lending (giving), what your friend might do with it, and what the consequences might be if your friend misuses it. [ ] 6. DO NOT SUBMIT THE SAME WORK FOR CREDIT IN TWO COURSES: Instructors do not give grades in a course, rather students earn their grades. Thus, instructors expect that students will earn their grades by completing all course requirements (assignments) while they are actually enrolled in the course. If a student uses his/her work from one course to satisfy the requirements of a different course, that student is not only violating the spirit of the assignment, but he/she is also putting other students in the course at a disadvantage. Even though it might be your own work, you are not permitted to turn in the same work to meet the requirements of more than one course. [ ] 7. DO YOUR OWN WORK: When you turn in an assignment with only your name on it, then the work on that assignment should be yours and yours alone. This means that you should not copy any work done by or work together with another student (or other person). [ ] 8. MANAGE YOUR TIME: Do not put off your assignments until the last minute. If you do, you might put yourself in a position where your only options are to turn in an incomplete (or no) assignment or to cheat. [...] 9. PROTECT YOUR WORK AND THE WORK OF OTHERS: The assignments that you complete as a student are your "intellectual property," and you should protect your intellectual property just as you would any of your other property. [ ] 10. READ THE COURSE SYLLABUS AND ASK QUESTIONS: Many instructors prepare and distribute (or make available on a web site) a course syllabus. Read the course syllabus for every course you take! 5