Coffee Hour with Khadijah White | New Atlas of Maine | AAG deadlines

IMAGE OF THE WEEK

Pop Carte!

University Park Campus in Pop Carte vision.

In Cindy Brewer’s 467 class, students were inspired by reading “Expressive Map Design Based on Pop Art: Revisit of Semiology of Graphics?” by Sidonie Christophe and Charlotte Hoarau to make some of their own as they learned how to edit map design in Mapbox Studio. Students had a great time. See more cool pop carte here: http://pennstategeog467.github.io/pop-carte/

GOOD NEWS

  • Aparna Parikh received an Achieving Woman award in the graduate student category at the Commission for Women awards luncheon yesterday.
  • Vincenzo Leone won the Marie-Curie research fellowship.  This is two-year research award is among the most competitive and prestigious in Europe.  It comes with generous funding to spend two years at UCL in London.
  • Dana Cuomo has accepted the position of Student Advocate and Care Coordinator in the Health and Wellness Center at the University of Washington. She’ll be providing advocacy services to survivors of sexual violence, dating violence and stalking, and will continue to do research in these areas. The position begins June 1.
  • Russ Hedberg had an article accepted for publication in the journal Landscape Research. The title of the article is “The Ecology of Alternative Food Landscapes: A Framework for Assessing the Ecology of Alternative Food Networks and its Implications for Sustainability,” and it will appear in a forthcoming special issue on food and the landscape.
  • Emma Gaalaas Mullaney recently received the 2015 Dimensions of Political Ecology Graduate Student Paper Award, and the 2015 Women’s Studies Department Sara Woods Outstanding Graduate Teaching Award.

NEWS

April 10 Coffee Hour Khadijah White “Missing White Women, Missing America”
This project investigates the news convergences of two essentialist and geographically centered representations of the white female body as a larger social, political, and cultural symbol of respectability in the new millennium. Specifically, this piece examines the rhetorical rise of the term “Stay-At-Home Mom” within news stories in relation to the disproportionate news coverage of white female victims at the turn of the 21st century, a phenomenon that professor Sheri Parks calls “Missing White Woman Syndrome” (MWWS) and scholar Rebecca Wanzo (Wanzo 2008) refers to as “Lost Girl Event”.

Recently (or soon to be) published
Historical Atlas of Maine
By Stephen J. Hornsby and Richard W. Judd, Editors; Michael J. Hermann (B.S. ’95), Cartographic Designer
After more than a decade of extensive research, the Historical Atlas of Maine presents in cartographic form the historical geography of Maine from the end of the last ice age to the year 2000. Organized in four chronological sections, the Atlas tells the principal stories of the many people who have lived in Maine over the past 13,000 years. The Atlas covers the history of Native peoples, European exploration and settlement, the American Revolution, Maine statehood, industrial development, and the rise of tourism and environmental awareness. To tell these stories, the Atlas presents a rich array of newly created maps, historical maps, paintings, graphs, and text. The result is not only a unique interpretation of Maine, but also a splendid visual record of the state’s history.

Alumni and Friends Reception during AAG
The Department of Geography will hold a reception on April 23, from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. during the AAG annual meeting in Chicago. For more information and to sign-up: http://www.geog.psu.edu/aag-reception

DOG OF THE WEEK

Last week’s mystery dog was Dixie, companion to Claire Regan. Hannah Ingram was the first to provide the correct answer. Send a photo of your dog (or any animal companion) to geography@psu.edu for our mystery dog of the week!

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