KULTUURIGEOGRAAFIA
Cultural geography as a subfield in human geography focuses on the performance of cultures in space and takes interest in both material and non-material subject fields. Cultural geography concentrates on distribution (where things are and why), ways of life, systems of meaning, questions of practice...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Keel ja kirjandus 2008, Vol.LI (8-09), p.654-664 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | est |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cultural geography as a subfield in human geography focuses on the performance
of cultures in space and takes interest in both material and non-material
subject fields. Cultural geography concentrates on distribution (where things are
and why), ways of life, systems of meaning, questions of practice; and notions of
power. In this article I discuss the multiple directions of cultural geography in the
context of the traditions of Anglo-American geography and human sciences and
expand on the historical development and primary characteristics of Estonian
cultural geography.
The American geographer Carl O. Sauer is traditionally considered as the
founder of cultural geography. For decades, Sauer and the Berkeley school kept
the research focus of cultural geography solely on material culture and its physical
manifestations. Determining the spread of various material phenomena and practices in space (i.e. the mapping of farmsteads, the spread of certain farm types,
agricultural sowing techniques, the domestication of plants and animals, etc.)
became the main concern of the discipline. In all, the main agenda of cultural geography
during the first half of the 20th century comprised the following topics:
human-environment relationships, which were studied via landscapes; the origin
and spread of agricultural and other techniques; the regional varieties of material
culture on planet Earth.
The qualitative turn that reached geography in the 1950s weakened the position
of cultural geography in institutional geography. A number of geographers of
the time attempted to find a solution to the methodological issues in researching
culture and environment by resorting to simple descriptions and avoiding the
application of statistical methods. Thus in the 1970s there evolved a new, counter-
reactionary branch called humanistic geography – a new approach that
studied human awareness, agency, consciousness and creativity. Among the most
famous representatives of humanistic geography there should be named Lowenthal,
Tuan, Entrikin and Bunkπe. Humanistic geography achieved a muchearned
breakthrough in geography and was integrated into the new directions of
cultural geography in the 1980s.
Criticism against the Sauerian traditional cultural geography with its
exhausted core terms of „culture” and „landscape” that had been getting in the
way of science for decades initiated the emergence of a new direction in cultural
geography that is even now called „new” cultural geography. „New |
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ISSN: | 0131-1441 |