Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The beginning and the end
- 2 Geography during the inter-war years
- 3 Geography in the University of Wales, 1918–1948
- 4 Geography at Birkbeck College, University of London, with particular reference to J. F. Unstead and E. G. R. Taylor
- 5 The Oxford School of Geography
- 6 Geography in the Joint School (London School of Economics and King's College)
- 7 Geography in a University College (Nottingham)
- 8 Geographers and their involvement in planning
- 9 On the writing of historical geography, 1918–1945
- 10 Physical geography in the universities, 1918–1945
- 11 Geographers and geomorphology in Britain between the wars
- 12 British geography, 1918–1945: a personal perspective
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The beginning and the end
- 2 Geography during the inter-war years
- 3 Geography in the University of Wales, 1918–1948
- 4 Geography at Birkbeck College, University of London, with particular reference to J. F. Unstead and E. G. R. Taylor
- 5 The Oxford School of Geography
- 6 Geography in the Joint School (London School of Economics and King's College)
- 7 Geography in a University College (Nottingham)
- 8 Geographers and their involvement in planning
- 9 On the writing of historical geography, 1918–1945
- 10 Physical geography in the universities, 1918–1945
- 11 Geographers and geomorphology in Britain between the wars
- 12 British geography, 1918–1945: a personal perspective
- Index
Summary
This collection of essays began as a direct consequence of the work that I undertook on behalf of the Institute of British Geographers to prepare a history of its first fifty years. It was suggested to me that, while I was delving into the development of the subject in 1933, the year in which the Institute was founded, and the years immediately before then, I might also attempt an assessment of the position of geography in Britain between the wars. The idea appealed to me for I had been taught in Oxford by J. N. L. Baker who had always impressed upon me and my fellow students the importance of an appreciation of the history of geography. I subscribed wholly to the view that he had expressed in a lecture on ‘Geography and its history’ given to Section E (Geography) of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1955 (Baker 1955:198):
The history of geography is long and honourable. No geographer need apologise for it or be ashamed of it … it is only when the geography of our day is seen against the background of its history that its present position can be appreciated and its future prospects assessed.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- British Geography 1918–1945 , pp. vii - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987