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4 - Social Geography: History, Structure and Reflections, with Special Reference to India

from II - Conceptual and Theoretical Basis of Social Geography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

B. K. Roy
Affiliation:
National Atlas and Thematic Mapping Organization, India
Ashok K. Dutt
Affiliation:
Professor Emeritus in Geography, Planning and Urban Studies, University of Akron, USA
Vandana Wadhwa
Affiliation:
Lecturer in the Department of Geography and Environment at Boston University, Massachusetts
Baleshwar Thakur
Affiliation:
Former Head of the Department of Geography, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi,
Frank J. Costa
Affiliation:
Professor Emeritus in Geography, Planning, Urban Studies and Public Administration at the University of Akron, USA.
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Summary

The field of social geography is inherent to the study of societies, their way of life, customs and traditions. The historical dispersal of social geography has undergone change through many different stages due to new scientific development. Explorations of various time periods had great bearing on the exposition of routes, civilizations, and economics of lands and people, which brought the societies to limelight and established contemporary trends. In geography, the contributions of Vidal de la Blache (1845–1918) paved a distinctive role to relate the qualities of environment to societies, and Jean Brunhes (1869–1930) emphasized the assessment of communities by their background and economic resources. The contributions of de la Blache and Brunhes, along with those who followed their lead, initiated a particular study of causative social geography throughout the world. Their studies were actually related to human adjustments to climate, physical bases, transports, economic activities, houses, dwellings and cultivation of environment. Before World War II, the scope and objectives in the study of social geography were confined to physical geographic influences on human societies. As far as the American and the European views on the structure of social geography are concerned, the ideas of Hartshorne and Houston respectively are the most characteristic and parallel in alignment as noted below. Their ideas, in a way, satisfied universal appeal. Thus, this chapter is centred on these parameters with reference to important literature on their subject.

Type
Chapter
Information
Facets of Social Geography
International and Indian Perspectives
, pp. 49 - 64
Publisher: Foundation Books
Print publication year: 2012

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