This podcast contains lectures for Thomas Larsen’s world geography courses. For educational purposes only.
If this podcast were a Buzzfeed article, it would be a list of reasons why most Westerners are wrong about Africa. We will explore the various kinds of kanju (Yoruba for ‘to hustle’) in African society, and how kanju logic has transformed the continent into a hub of creativity.
In this exploration of South America, we consider the many ways memento mori, remembering our death, manifests through death rituals, Napoleon Chagnon’s Darkness in Eldorado conspiracy, and the end of nature. What becomes clear is that life contains a myriad of ends. But with that comes an array of new beginnings.
This episode, we will look at how rebellion takes place in the modern political and economic realms: through reggae music, the story of Pancho Villa, Banana Republics in Central America, and the Cuban Revolution. We build upon the idea that rebellion is a multifaceted form of place-making and place-destruction, involving not just political ideologies, but also culture and economics.
Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean represent arguably some of the most misunderstood regions to Americans. This episode, we will explore rebellions against common colonial narratives, as well as the first slave-led rebellion in the New World. Much of this episode’s discussion will be centered on the island of Hispaniola, which will gain much more significance as we move forward.
This week, we will dive into the American worldview and examine the theme of interdependence with the natural world and one another. We will identify strategies for how to slow down our thinking about hot-button issues, interpret information we receive from news outlets, have impossible conversations, and understand how democracy works.
Synthesis involves the ability to link information together to create new knowledge. We will explore synthesis as one of geography’s capabilities and why it is central to your life.
Range is the first capability we will explore in this podcast. Range reflects the breadth of geography. We will briefly explore how cultivating range in geography can help your career.
Have you ever felt like an outsider or an outcast? Human history is filled with tales of these people. Places of exile and confinement are products of society’s fear of disorder and desire for control. In this podcast, we will explore what it is like to be an outsider, outcast, or outlaw Southeast Asia and Oceania.
For this episode, we will talk about how paradoxes, insideness and outsideness, and boundaries can help us better understand the dynamics of East and South Asia.
The Middle East, or Southwest Asia, will be our main region of focus. Dr. Richard Haass (2020) is the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and was the Middle East advisor to President George H.W. Bush. He mentions three themes that distinguish the Middle East from other world regions: religion, energy, and violence. I will expand on each of these themes to give us a better sense of the Middle East.
Russians have a special name, toska, which translates to a refined, elevated kind of boredom. Enduring the harsh Iowa winters indoors, we might experience toska from time to time. People often associate empty landscapes with boredom. My goal is to change that in this podcast.
This is the first of a series of special episodes that I entitle, Geography’s Capabilities. The research that I have done on the subject suggests that we exist in a Great Deprivation, in which students are deprived of essential capabilities from subjects like geography. Subsequent episodes will explore various capabilities which can inform and empower all learners.
Using Europe as our backdrop, we are going to talk about superstitions, pathways, and talking to strangers. By the end, it is my hope that you will be able to: 1) explain how the environment and superstitions interconnect, using witch hunting in Europe as an example; 2) explore the various pathways Europe has to offer; and 3) articulate why people are terrible at profiling strangers.
During this episode, Dr. Larsen was a geographer-at-large, exploring San Antonio, Texas, often called the Mexican capital outside of Mexico. We begin on a two-part journey through Africa. If this podcast were a Buzzfeed article, it would be a list of reasons why most Westerners are wrong about Africa. We will explore the various kinds of kanju (Yoruba for ‘to hustle’) in African society, and how kanju logic has transformed the continent into a hub of creativity.
In this exploration of South America, we consider the many ways memento mori, remembering our death, manifests through death rituals, Napoleon Chagnon’s Darkness in Eldorado conspiracy, and the end of nature. What becomes clear is that life contains a myriad of ends. But with that comes an array of new beginnings.
This week, we will look at how rebellion takes place in the modern political and economic realms: through reggae music, the story of Pancho Villa, Banana Republics in Central America, and the Cuban Revolution. We build upon the idea that rebellion is a multifaceted form of place-making and place-destruction, involving not just political ideologies, but also culture and economics.
Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean represent arguably some of the most misunderstood regions to Americans. This week, we will explore rebellions against common colonial narratives, as well as the first slave-led rebellion in the New World. Much of this week’s discussion will be centered on the island of Hispaniola, which will gain much more significance as we move forward.
This week, we will dive into the American worldview and examine the theme of interdependence with the natural world and one another. We will identify strategies for how to slow down our thinking about hot-button issues, interpret information we receive from news outlets, have impossible conversations, and understand how democracy works.
Have you ever felt like an outsider or an outcast? Human history is filled with tales of these people. Places of exile and confinement are products of society’s fear of disorder and desire for control. In this podcast, we will explore what it is like to be an outsider, outcast, or outlaw Southeast Asia and Oceania.
Today, we will talk about how paradoxes, insideness and outsideness, and boundaries can help us better understand the dynamics of East and South Asia.
The Middle East, or Southwest Asia, will be our main region of focus. Dr. Richard Haass (2020) is the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and was the Middle East advisor to President George H.W. Bush. He mentions three themes that distinguish the Middle East from other world regions: religion, energy, and violence. I will expand on each of these themes to give us a better sense of the Middle East.
Russians have a special name, toska, which translates to a refined, elevated kind of boredom. Enduring the harsh Iowa winters indoors, we might experience toska from time to time. People often associate empty landscapes with boredom. My goal is to change that in this podcast. Erratum: In the podcast, I mention that Big Diomede and Little Diomede belong to the U.S. That is incorrect. Big Diomede (Tomorrow Island) is owned by Russia, which makes Russia around 2.4 miles from the United States.
Using Europe as our backdrop, we are going to talk about superstitions, pathways, and talking to strangers. By the end, it is my hope that you will be able to explain how the environment and superstitions interconnect, using witch hunting in Europe as an example; explore the various pathways Europe has to offer; and articulate why people are terrible at profiling strangers.