EPISODE EIGHTEEN

In Pedagogy of the Compressed we venture through different spaces of teaching and learning with Dr. Rich Heyman of the University of Texas and ride upcycled bicycles through northern California with Seth Dow, Andy Knox, Hannah Halvorsen and Brandon Herhusky of Sugar Bowl Academy.  In this time-space compressed world what does it mean to be “doing” geography and how can our methodology, or the how, be more important than the what?  (Photo by Seth Dow)

 

Bike Trip California

 

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Tobacco Road is Really in Connecticut

The University of Connecticut Huskies basketball teams have won a combined 15 NCAA Division 1 National Championships in the last 22 years. That is 15 out of a possible 44 or just over one-third of the annual trophies. The Huskies collectively have never lost a NCAA Final game and have one of the best winning percentages in the Final Four. Sure, they didn’t win championships before 1995 but here is how the tandem matches up against other basketball school pairs that claim elite or “blue blood” status.

UCLA (11), Tennessee (8), Kentucky (8), North Carolina (6), Indiana (5), Duke (5)

One of the lectures I have given to students of cultural geography looks at cultural landscapes and college basketball seems to find its way in there. As a graduate of the University of Connecticut living in Chapel Hill, North Carolina I found myself having some fun with the place-name “Tobacco Road.”  It refers to some imaginary place not on the map—although the region is known for growing tobacco and producing cigarettes—where 4 universities are located very close to each other and whose heated rivalry has maybe been matched only by the famous “Big 5” in Philadelphia. Wake Forest, NC State, UNC-Chapel Hill & Duke are all top players on the national basketball scene, household names thanks to people like Dick Vitale and Jim Nantz. Given the success of these programs, Tobacco Road has taken on a meaning of excellence and for good reason…they are good.

The lecture is called, “Tobacco Road is Really in Connecticut”. Given the Connecticut River valley’s historical production of high quality tobacco leaf for cigar wrappers we can make this claim. (See Windsor, CT if you are interested.) As a cultural-historical geographer I recognize the place of the past in the production of present landscapes and realize that these southern “Tobacco Road” teams have (maybe) been better for more years.  But with championship #15 under our collective Husky belts I find it necessary to return to the stats and see how the Huskies match up against all of Tobacco Road.

Connecticut 15—Tobacco Road 13.

OK, the chants of “SAT Scores” will be heard from Cameron (Duke’s Arena), UNC will quote from the hagiography of Dean Smith and, well, NC State’s underdog win is forever memorialized in our minds (digitally, now) as one of the best finishes in all sports. Tough to beat. Maybe basketball is not all about the hardware—those not-so-fashionable wooden trophies the NCAA gifts the victors.  Maybe it is more about overcoming those personal and collective challenges not measured by the standard of the material prize.  Either way a championship is quite sweet.

 

Smoke ‘em if you got ‘em.

 

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EPISODE SEVENTEEN Navigating Terra Incognita

Busy working on EPISODE SEVENTEEN, Navigating Terra Incognita. We start here in Salzburg with a statue of St. Vergilius, an 8th century Irish saint who believed the world was round and then travel out to terra incognita in a leather boat with another Irish saint, St. Brendan the Navigator.  It is the Voyage of St. Brendan, a popular medieval religious narrative, that we focus on and explore how different readings of this text produce different geographical imaginations.  Contributors include Dr. Paul Pearson of the The Thomas Merton Center at Bellarmine University, Dr. Clara Strijbosch of Utrecht University and Jon Mackley from the University of Northampton.

The episode first broadcasts Saturday, March 26th on Radio Fabrik at 7:06 PM Salzburg, Austria time and 2:06 PM New York. As always, you can find the podcast posted later on the website at https://www.geographicalimaginations.org/episodes/.

 

Vergilius

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Geographical Imaginations Road Trip

Geographical Imaginations takes the show on the road next week for the Easter holidays. We visit the Slovak Republic and southern Poland and, no doubt, will expand our ways of thinking about the region. As part of our commitment to cross-cultural exchange and doing public geography we will give two short talks along the way.

On March 28th, Kevin S. Fox will present MAKING PUBLIC GEOGRAPHIES at Pecha Kucha Night Bardejov Vol. 5 in Bardejov, Slovakia. See here for more details:https://www.facebook.com/events/931632140245798/.

On March 31st at Pecha Kucha Night Katowice (Poland) Vol. 15 Sonia Ibáñez joins Kevin for an exploration of self and landscape along the Appalachian Trail in FOOTPRINTING AMERICA . For more details check out their event page:https://www.facebook.com/events/1052059574817519/.

 

Waiting for Train

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EPISODE SIXTEEN Making Heritage

In EPISODE SIXTEEN, Making Heritage, we bring in two voices to help us analyze three sites with something in common: the historic city center of Salzburg, the Hallstatt-Dachstein / Salzkammergut Cultural Landscape, and the Viennese Coffee Houses.  All three iconic Austrian places are recognized as cultural heritage sites–the first two on the UNESCO World Heritage Site list and the last on the Austrian Inventory of Intangible Heritage.

Listen as we dialogue with scholars Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett and Marilena Vecco and explore the nature of making heritage and the developments surrounding the recognition of “intangible” cultural sites.

The episode first broadcasts this Saturday, February 27th on Radio Fabrik at 7:06 PM Salzburg, Austria time and 1:06 PM New York.  As always, you can find the podcast after original airing here just under the Episodes tab.

Hawelka

 

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