Denis Cosgrove
Denis Edmund Cosgrove was a distinguished British cultural geographer and Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles. Before this, he was Professor of Human Geography and Dean of the Graduate School at Royal Holloway, University of London. In 1998, he received the prestigious Back Award from the Royal Geographical Society.
Early life and education
Cosgrove was born and raised in Liverpool, the second eldest of six children. His father, a bank manager and devout Roman Catholic, was very active in his upbringing, sending him to the Jesuit school he had himself attended, St Francis Xavier's College, Liverpool. Geography was a subject Cosgrove loved, but the school had a low opinion of it, and as an A-stream student he was forced to drop it in favour of Latin and Greek.He went up to St Catherine's College, Oxford for his undergraduate studies in Geography, graduating in 1969, then going on to complete an MA in Geography at the University of Toronto. After marrying his first wife in New York, he returned to the University of Oxford to do a doctorate with a "head full of new ideas", but with little academic support, and left to take a job "up the hill" as Lecturer at Oxford Polytechnic in 1972. Meanwhile, his thesis on Venetian landscape was submitted for a Bachelor of Letters degree, only to be successfully resubmitted for a Doctor of Philosophy degree on the insistence of its examiner, David Lowenthal, who considered it an outstanding piece of work.
Career and later life
Cosgrove remained at Oxford Polytechnic until 1980, rising to be Principal Lecturer. He then moved to Loughborough University becoming Reader in 1988, before transferring to Royal Holloway, University of London in 1994 as Professor, ultimately serving as Dean of the Graduate School. He was appointed Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles in 2000, remaining a Visiting Professor at Royal Holloway, University of London until his death.Cosgrove was about to become chairman of the Geography department at UCLA, when he was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 2006. He had been named Getty Distinguished Scholar for 2008-9, and had planned to work on Geography and Art in Los Angeles. Cosgrove died of cancer at his home in Los Angeles on 21 March 2008. He was survived by his first wife Isobel, his second wife Carmen, and his son and two daughters.
Honours and awards
In February 2008, Cosgrove was awarded an honorary doctorate from Tallinn University., having previously been awarded the prestigious Back Award from the Royal Geographical Society in 1988. He delivered the influential Hettner Lectures in 2005.. Following his death, he was widely recognised for his contribution to the field, including an extensive reflection on his career and research in the journal Cultural Geographies.. The Centre for GeoHumanities at Royal Holloway, University of London holds an annual lecture in his honour.Research
Cosgrove's research interests evolved from a focus on the meanings of landscape in human and cultural geography, especially in Western Europe since the 15th century, to a broader concern with the role of spatial images and representations in the making and communicating of knowledge. His work included how visual images have been used in history to shape geographical imaginations and in connection between geography as a formal discipline, imaginative expressions of geographical knowledge and experience in the visual arts. This research made essential contributions to the development of geography of media and communication.This broad concern was pursued through a series of focussed studies: of landscape transformation, design and images in 16th-century Venice and north Italy, of landscape writings by authors such as John Ruskin, of landscape, space and performance in 20th century Rome, of cosmography in early modern Europe, and of the history of Western imaginings of the globe and whole earth. He has also written extensively on theory in cultural geography and edited for six years the journal Ecumene which publishes cross-disciplinary work on environment, culture and meaning.
Within his cultural research, Cosgrove differentiated between dominant cultures and alternative cultures. The dominant culture has the most influence in shaping a landscape. Most of what you see, he claimed, is likely to be a product of the dominant culture in a region. However, one is also likely to see evidence of alternative, or subcultures in the landscape. Within the category of alternative culture, Cosgrove differentiated between residual cultures, emergent cultures, and excluded cultures.
Selected publications
1983
- Towards a radical cultural geography: problems of theory, Antipode 15, 1–11
1988
- The Iconography of Landscape: Essays on the Symbolic Representation, Design and Use of Past Environments,, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
1990
- Water Engineering and Landscape: Water Control and Landscape Transformation in the Modern Period, 192 pp. London: Belhaven
1997
- Cultural Landscapes, in Tim Unwin Europe: a modern geography, Longman, London, 1997, 65–81
1998
- Social formation and Symbolic Landscape, Wisconsin Univ. Press, 1998
- Urban rhetoric and embodied identities: city, nation and empire at the Vittorio Emanuele II monument in Rome 1870–1944, Annals, Association of American Geographers, 88, 1, 1998, 28–49.
1999
- Airport/Landscape, in J Corner Recovering Landscape Princeton Architectural Press, Princeton NJ, 1999, 221–232
- Empire in modern Rome: shaping and remembering an imperial city, in F Driver & D Gilbert Imperial Cities: landscape, display, identity. Manchester University Press, Manchester, 1999, 40–63
- La géographie culturelle et la signification du millénaire, Géographie et Cultures, 31, 1999, 49–64
- Liminal geometry and elemental landscape: construction and representation, in J Corner Recovering Landscape Princeton Architectural Press, Princeton NJ, 1999, 103–120
- Mappings 311 pp. Reaktion Books, London, 1999
2000
- Global illumination and enlightenment in the geographies of Vincenzo Coronelli and Athanasius Kircher, in C Withers & D Livingstone Enlightenment Geographies, Chicago University Press, Chicago, 2000, 33–66.
- Millennial geographics, Annals, Association of American Geographers 90. 1, 2000
2001
- Apollo's Eye: a cartographic genealogy of the Earth in the Western Imagination, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD, 2001
2003
- Ptolemy and Vitruvius: Spatial representation in the 16th-century texts and commentaries in Architecture and Sciences, Princeton Architectural Press, New York, NY, 2003
2006
- Carto-City, in Else/Where: Mapping – New Cartographies of Networks and Territories, Janet Abrams and Peter Hall, 148–157. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Design Institute
2007
- Images of Renaissance Cosmography, 1450–1650, in Cartography in the European Renaissance, David Woodward, 55–98. Vol. 3 of The History of Cartography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
- Mapping the World, in Maps: Finding Our Place in the World, James R. Akerman and Robert W Karrow, Jr, 65–115. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
2008
- High places: cultural geographies of mountains and ice,, IB Tauris