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Ellsworth Huntington (1876–1947)
Ellsworth Huntington was a professor at Yale and one of the early giants of the discipline of
geography in the United States. He was a student of William Morris Davis at Yale and
conducted Asian fieldwork in the early 20th century. He was one of the first scholars to recognize
the imprint of climate change in the ruins of ancient societies and became the leading
proponent of environmental determinism. His premise was that climate was the root
cause of the rise and fall of civilizations. Far from being known only in academic circles, Huntington’s
engaging writing style and prodigious production made him a popular author. His
seminal books included The Pulse of Asia, Civilization and Climate and Mainsprings of Civilization.
In retrospect, they were based on some scholarship and many grand generalizations that are
simplistic and sometimes racist. For instance, he believed that middle latitude storminess
“energized” populations and led to the progress of civilizations in Western Europe and North
America while the lack of such storminess inhibited African development. Huntington’s popularity
instigated a backlash among geographers to the extent that his ideas were castigated
and provided fuel for the development of social and cultural geography, which took a more
complex view of the interrelations between nature and humans.
منبع : Encyclopedia of Geography Terms, Themes, and Concepts