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Monograph Partial access
Mediating Geographic Knowledge
U.S. Geographical Societies, 1888-1914- Authors:
- Series:
- Amerika: Kultur - Geschichte - Politik, Volume 15
- Publisher:
- 2026
Summary
Between 1888 and 1914, U.S. geographical societies became central institutions mediating the production and circulation of geographic knowledge. Anchoring his analysis in the American Geographical Society, Maximilian Reimann moves beyond celebrated explorers to examine the knowledge infrastructures, networks, and everyday labor of editors, librarians, and councilors who defined modern geography. He traces how knowledge traveled from the field to libraries and archives, evolving into publications and lectures that had to balance academic credibility with popular appeal. Together, national and regional societies shaped geography into a respected discipline and a popular science entangled with American national ambitions and imperial visions.
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Bibliographic data
- Edition
- 1/2026
- Copyright Year
- 2026
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8376-7488-0
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-8394-7488-4
- Publisher
- transcript, Bielefeld
- Series
- Amerika: Kultur - Geschichte - Politik
- Volume
- 15
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 211
- Product Type
- Monograph
Table of contents
ChapterPages
- Frontmatter Full access Pages 1 - 6 Download chapter (PDF)
- Introduction: The Politics of Space No access Pages 9 - 21
- 1 Theory and Method: A History of Knowledge No access Pages 23 - 29
- 2 Organizing Knowledge No access Pages 31 - 64
- 3 Professionalizing Knowledge No access Pages 65 - 96
- 4 Circulating Knowledge No access Pages 97 - 122
- 5 Disseminating Knowledge No access Pages 123 - 144
- 6 Representing Knowledge: The Pacific as American Space No access Pages 145 - 178
- Conclusion: Geography, Authority, Empire No access Pages 179 - 184
- Bibliography No access Pages 185 - 205
- Acknowledgements No access Pages 207 - 208






