Jerome E Dodson Bring Geography Back Summary

412 Words1 Page

Hailey Miller
Dr. Padgett
GEOG 1010
6 February 2018
Deeper Than Maps
Geography is defined as the study places and the relationships between people and their environment. Most people believe geography is all about maps and has nothing to do with our daily lives and careers that don’t pertain to the subject directly. In "Bring Geography Back" Jerome E Dodson explains "Geography is about understanding people and places and how real-world places function in a viscerally organic sense." The meaning of geography has been questioned over time but has shown to be way more than a subject just for children. Looking back on the history of Geography though 1400-1700 was the Spatial Tradition of Geography. During that period in the world people sailed the globe making it the "Exploratory Period". During the 1700-1900 Geographers practiced white supremacy to explain the concept of Human-Land Tradition of Geography. 1900-1930 Geography began to lose its credit in the scientific world.
Quantitative Revolution Geographers become more structural to real science in the 1950s.Geographic Information Systems (GIS) became introduced by computers. Geographers were also given opportunities from The Environmental Movement. The 'Space Age' caused the development of Global Positioning Systems. From 1970 to today's society …show more content…

In "Geography and Everyday" Life Reginald Golledge argues "This geographic knowledge enables us to understand the things we do on a daily or other episodic basis, and how everyday actions (like traveling to work) affect the world around us (e.g. auto pollution contributing to global warming)". This explains how being knowledgeable on how geography is a part of our lives can lead to having a better understanding on how things we do affect ourselves and the world. Things that we do such as choosing vacation destinations to as simple as deciding which route to travel to work are all

Open Document