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Regional studies : the interplay of land and people / edited by Glen E. Lich. [electronic resource]

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Lich, Glen E., 1948-
Series:
Essays on the American West ; no. 12
Essays on the American West Regional studies
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Regionalism--Texas--Congresses.
Regionalism.
Human geography--Texas--Congresses.
Human geography.
Texas--Civilization--20th century--Congresses.
Texas.
Texas--Rural conditions--Congresses.
Regionalism--Congresses--Texas.
Human geography--Congresses--Texas.
Genre:
Conference papers and proceedings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xiii, 181 p. ) ill. ;
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
College Station, Tex. : Texas A&M University Press, c1992.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
What makes a region a region, and how does one region differ from another? What are the tests of evidence of regionalism? What boundaries have meaning--political, geophysical, economic, cultural, psychological, ethnic, linguistic? Are there special problems in reporting findings about life within a region? These questions and others regarding methods and interdisciplinary content run through this stimulating series of papers on the interplay of land and people. While the.
Concept of region means different things to different academic disciplines, the contributors to this volume agree that the study of regions and regionalism can--and should--be undertaken with seriousness. Contributors include William R. Ferris, Terry G. Jordan, Howard R. Lamar, Ann R. Markusen, Charles Hamm, Samuel S. Hill, Susan H. Armitage, Frederic G. Cassidy, Wilbur Zelinsky, Oscar J. Martinez, and Lynwood Montell. Glen E. Lich, the volume's editor, provides a.
Concluding overview. The volume is arranged in three parts. The opening section addresses the comparative study of regions, and the second section applies multidisciplinary considerations to the study of regionalism and economics, politics, culture, religion, gender, and language. The last section points toward four closely connected issues: the definition and use of variables in regionalism, approaches to regions both large and small, and a final appeal for integrative.
And comparative perspectives. This volume places the study of regionalism within the wide parameters of the history of the concept, its significance in western thought, and its many and varied manifestations.
Contents:
Region as art / William R. Ferris
The concept and method / Terry G. Jordan
Regionalism and the broad methodological problem / Howard R. Lamar
The economics and politics of regionalism / Ann R. Markusen
The media, politics, and regionalism / Charles Hamm
Region and religion / Samuel S. Hill
Gender and regionalism / Susan H. Armitage
The language of regionalism / Frederic G. Cassidy
The changing character of North American culture areas / Wilbur Zelinsky
A binational region : the borderlands / Oscar J. Martínez
A subregion : the Upper Cumberland / Lynwood Montell
Spatial integration : the argument for context / Glen E. Lich.
Notes:
Based on papers from a symposium held at Baylor University in 1987.
ISBN:
0-585-17478-4

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