Preface

“The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them.”

– Mark Twain

 

Two full-time Geography professors at College of DuPage have written a particular format of textbook for our course Geography of the Eastern World. One key feature of the textbook is that it is an open source textbook, online and free for our students (and potentially, for anyone).  The other noteworthy feature of the textbook is its format as a series of essays on topical/regional geographic subjects.  Given that the textbook is a free and open source textbook, there is no money to be made writing the book.  My colleague and I wrote the textbook in order to contest the often exorbitant cost of regular textbooks and to create a base of knowledge that we want our students to have without the need of sifting through longer chapters. Read this and know this.

The essays are organized by matrix.  One side of the matrix consists of six regions – North Africa and the Middle East (NAME), Sub-Saharan Africa (SSAfrica), Southeast Asia, East Asia, South Asia, and Central Asia.  The other side has eight topical categories of Geography – cultural, economic, historical, physical, political, population, regional, and urban.  There are other elements of the textbook too, but this is the core.  Therefore, essays are created under the headings of pairs of the matrix – an essay on some aspect of political geography in South Asia, another on an aspect of physical geography in Sub-Saharan Africa.  Notice that this does not mean we are covering the whole physical geography of Sub-Saharan Africa.

Far from it.  Instead we are covering one topic at a time in the physical geography of Sub-Saharan Africa, so that the student gains a flavor of the idea of physical geography and gains a fundamental understanding of one topic in that category for Sub-Saharan Africa.  For instance, one essay that has been written covers the topic of the Great Green Wall – physical geography in Sub-Saharan Africa.  Another chapter addresses Aging Japan – population geography in East Asia. Each pair in the matrix produces one or more essays/chapters in that matched category.

Each essay is written to explain a fundamental understanding of the chosen topic, but definitely not everything on the topic. The essays are based on the format of an intellectual devotional.  As such, each essay is expected to be 700-1200 words.  This is not a Wikipedia entry, although certainly we often referred to Wikipedia for some general background information. In fact, a Wikipedia entry is too long, often too dense, and just not right for our introductory level students. Instead each of our essays is a focused, student-oriented explanation of the basics of the chosen topic. Essay – 700-1200 words.  Like at the end of this chapter, our chapters include a fun bonus fact or two in a blue box highlighted as “Did You Know?”  Citations at the end – yes, but relatively few.  For the variety of icons and photos used in the text, generally we must provide citations for their sources. These readings are not dissertations or articles in peer-reviewed professional journals.  Those would not be appropriate for an introductory textbook on the Geography of the Western World.  Instead, these essays are a synthesis of our own specialized knowledge, other information commonly understood by geographers, and certain specific researched facts.  This synthesis further reflects a boiling down of information to its topical essence.  It is our challenge to produce the essay that covers the essence of what the informed citizen would know on that topic.  Of course, students or any other readers can pursue additional depth of understanding by finding other material on the topic.

In addition, we have written explanations of the elements of topical geography.  What is Population Geography?  Here too we have explained the basics. What is Regional Geography? Again, we wrote a characterization of this realm of Geography. To this we added a summary of geographic facts about each region. Even with this set of essays, there were some things that we felt obligated to present more broadly for each region. Finally, we also penned an example of how regions are created within each of our matrix’s regions. What actually is the Fertile Crescent?

Occasionally, we were fortunate to receive another scholar’s work as a guest essay, specifically designed for this textbook project.  In those cases, the author’s name heads up that essay.  Otherwise, we wrote all the other essays.  We have made frequent use of The Noun Project, a large set of online icons, available for free use with proper citation. Similarly, all the photos and maps included in this textbook are available for free use with the proper citation, usually through the Creative Commons.  We are pleased to promote artists’ and scholars’ work and do provide them with recognition and citation. Neither we nor these photographers, cartographers, or illustrators will profit financially from this textbook or its contents.

We give special thanks to instructor Joe Adduci, with whose guidance College of DuPage’s GIS students created a number of maps for this textbook.

It may occur that a fine piece of journalism is published too late to be utilized for our already written chapters.  When we note those cases, we will add a red box “Hot off the Press” at the end of corresponding chapters.

Also, with certain chapters we include a colorful box “Check Your Understanding” that asks the reader to answer one question about the day’s topic.

Overall, consider this. For the student reader, imagine that the student is at a party.  When chatting with someone there, somehow Iceland is mentioned.  By reading, learning, and remembering the information in the essay/chapter on the Historical Geography of South Africa, the student would be able to make an impressive explanation of the features of the Historical Geography of South Africa.

 

Did You Know?

With each chapter and in a blue box, the “Did You Know?” feature highlights a fun fact that may be tangential to the topic of the essay.

Sometimes citations are a little bit weird, but we go with the requested reference for any given photographer, artist, or writer. Thus, you may see a citation like this one —

chocogato. DMZ Korea. Photo, 2 May 2004. Flickr, https://www.flickr.com/photos/chocogato/478495564/.                    Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0).

The photo was taken by chocogato, anyway that is the photographer’s handle on the flickr.com website. We also show that the photo qualifies for use in the Creative Commons with appropriate attribution.

 

ACRONYM

In some chapters of this textbook, we utilize acronyms. An acronym takes the first letters of other words and combines them to make another word. This learning tactic can help students remember concepts and facts by first remembering the acronym. Our icon for the acronym box is the MAD WASP, itself an acronym that we will use. The line art of the MAD WASP comes from the Noun Project, as many of our line art icons do (this particular image was created by PenSmasher).

 

Entrepôt

For a mini-series of several chapters, we address the concept of the entrepôt, a particular type of trading city. Each featured city in this mini-series will be identified with this green box and icon.

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J‌oel Quam                                                               Scott Campbell

License

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The Eastern World: Daily Readings on Geography Copyright © 2022 by Joel Quam and Scott Campbell is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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