1st Edition

A Hundred Years of Geography

By T.W. Freeman Copyright 1961
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    Far from dissolving, this effort demonstrates the ongoing vitality of geography as a profession. In a world increasingly sensitive to the problems of people and resources, geography has constantly provided the basic information for its sister sciences, economics, political science, sociology and demography, This book turns, attention to geography itself, in an incisive survey of the development of the discipline as a science. "A Hundred Years of Geography" draws together the threads of a century of progress, from the first scientific explorations and mappings to present-day trends toward specialization and generalization. It contains a synoptic view of the development of the various aspects of geography, showing how the field has been differentiated from associated disciplines and how it has differentiated and specialized within itself. The book also offers two important reference tools: a bibliography of the important geographical works published throughout the world, and biographical sketches of ninety important geographers. It is informative, stimulating, urbane and civilized reading, as well as being an excellent introductory text and reference work to recent scholarship in the field of geography.

    1: Changing Geography; 2: Geography from the Mid-Nineteenth Century; 3: Exploration and Education: The Work of the Societies from 1820 to 1900; 4: Geography in the Early Twentieth Century; 5: Physical Geography; 6: The Regional Approach; 7: Economic Factors in Geography; 8: Social Geography; 9: Political Geography; 10: The Advance of Cartography; 11: Neither a Beginning Nor an End

    Biography

    T.W. Freeman