Abstract

Part I: Establishing Traditions. 1. The Fashioning of an Empire: Geography and the State in Elizabethan England: Lesley B Cormack (University of Alberta). 2. Imperialists and Soldiers of Modernity: Anne Godlewska (Queen's University, Ontario, Canada). Part II: Geography's Scramble. 3. The Imperial Dream: Geography and the Spanish Empire in the 19th Century: Horacio Capel (University of Barcelona). 4. Geography and Imperialism in Italy: from the Unity of the Nation to the New Roman Empire: Lucio Gambi (University of Bologna). 5. The Science of Empire: The French Geographical Movement and the Forms of French Imperialism, 1870-1920: Mike Heffernan (Loughborough University). 6. Geography and Empire in Germany, 1871-1945: Mechtild Rossler and Gerhard Sandner (Loughborough University and University of Hamburg). Part III: The Rhetoric of Race and Gender. 7. Climate's Moral Economy: Science, Race and Place in Post-Darwinian British and American Geography: David N. Livingstone (Queen's University, Belfast). 8. Voyeurs of Imperialism: The National Geographic Magazine Before World War II: Tamar Y. Rothenberg (Rutgers University). 9. Space, Race and Geopolitical Necessity: Geopolitical Rhetoric in German Colonial Revanchism, 1919-1933: David T. Murphy (Anderson University, US). 10. The Japanese Imperial Tradition, Western Imperialism and Modern Japanese Geography: Keiichi Takeuchi (Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo, Japan). Part IV: Planning and Reflecting. 11. From Stinkibar to The Island Metropolis - The Geography of British Hegemony in Zanzibar: Garth Myers (Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, US). 12. Playing with Mirrors: The British Empire According to Albert Demangeon: Paul Claval (Sorbonne, Paris). 13. Imperialism and Colonialism Versus Disciplinarity in French Geography: Oliver Soubeyran (Universite de Montreal). Part V: Post-Colonial Geographies. 14. Shaking Loose the Colonies: Isaiah Bowman and the of the British Empire: Neil Smith (Rutgers University). 15. What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? Andrew Kirby (University of Arizona). 16. The Colonization of Geographic Thought: The South African Experience: Harold Wesso (University of the Western Cape, Bellvile, South Africa). 17. Post-colonialism, Decolonization and Geography: Jonathan Crush.

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