The Dictionary of Human Geography

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Physical geography is something of an intel-
lectual chimera, whose role, relations and def-
inition have changed as the nature and focus
of the geographical enterprise itself have
shifted. Throughout its modern history, phys-
ical geography has been implicated in most of
the central debates within geography but,
arguably, prospered from none. From formal
beginnings in the early Victorian age through
to the period between the two world wars, a
credible case can be made that physical geog-
raphy was geography. Physical geographers
were part of the disciplinary elite, and geo-
graphical education and research necessarily
began with the physical foundations of the
Earth environment, as deployed in and across
natural (geographical) regions. Somewhere in
the inter-war period, all this changed.
Geography was recast as a subject with an
essential duality of character. For the greater
part of the twentieth century, debates con-
cerning either the curse or the virtue of this
duality underscored geographical reflection,
while in terms of geographical endeavour, it
was physical geography that repeatedly lost
its place as trend-setter in the changing geo-
graphical tradition. By the later twentieth cen-
tury, geography had become an amorphous
and disconnected enterprise, whose concerns
were less with disciplinary identity, and
more with following humanistic approaches.
In what became a postmodern and post-
paradigmatic world, multiple and contested
viewpoints were new virtues, but intellectual
largesse was not bestowed on physical geog-
raphy, which was represented as the manifest-
ation of an unyieldingly, restrictive and
unwelcome positivism. In the new millen-
nium, physical geography may, however, be
on the verge of renaissance. Having fought
something of a quiet rearguard action within
the discipline, it may yet be revived from with-
out: first, as a new class of environmental
issues demand a new kind of scientific
approach; and, second, as Earth systems sci-
ence – physical geography by another name
and from other places – moves in to meet
this need.
Earlier nineteenth-century works provided
apparently firm foundations for the contem-
porary discipline. For example:

Physical geography is a description of the
earth, the sea, and the air, with their inhab-
itants animal and vegetable, of the distribu-
tion of these organized beings, and the
causes of their distribution. (Somerville,
1849, p. 1)

Physical geography was thus a broad, inclusive
body of knowledge, embracing the work of the
great natural scholars such as Alexander von
Humbolt and Charles Darwin, and claiming
an intellectual heritage as Immanuel Kant’s
‘propaedentic of natural knowledge’ (Huxley,
1877). Its project was that of geography as a
whole. Its scope and its holism, however,
became problems as early modern science
sought sophistication and institutional organ-
ization (see Livingstone, 1992), and as more
and more about a wide class of natural phe-
nomena became both known and knowable
(Dickinson and Howarth, 1933). Physical
geography provided an elegant underpinning
of classificatory schemes:

Few sciences offer better opportunities than
physical geography for studying large units
and grouping their various phenomena.
(Emerson, 1909, p. vii)

Its virtues were repeatedly extolled in general
education, and in support of emergent envir-
onmentalism (Marsh, 1965 [1864]). It was
less secure, however, as a coherent intellectual
enterprise, particularly asexplanationof phe-
nomena became the goals of science. Arnold
Guyot, drawing a distinction between anat-
omy (description) and physiology (explan-
ation) demanded that:

Physical geography ... ought to be, not
only the description of our earth, but the
physical science of the globe, or the science
of the ... present lifeof the globe in reference
to their connection and their mutual depend-
ence. (Guyot, 1850, p. 3)

Here, then, were the seeds of a basic dilemma
withinphysical geography, which provided the
backdrop for the later schism within geog-
raphy as a whole. Physical geography, in
search of both scientific prowess and academic
distinction, had somehow either to narrow its
focus (and risk trespass on established fields –
particularly geology), or make ambitious claim
to unoccupied territory (which, as the century
progressed, could draw on post-Darwinian
biology). Its response, in the shorter term,
was physiography – another pervasive term
with tortuous associations – and in the longer
term, a dalliance with environmental deter-
minism and its nemesis, human ecology.
In some incarnations, physiography was
physical geography in all its aspects:
Physiography is a description of the sub-
stance, form, arrangement and changes of
all the real things of Nature in their relation

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_P Final Proof page 532 1.4.2009 3:20pm

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
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