Joshua Muldavin

Joshua Muldavin

Professor of Asian Studies and Human Geography
Sarah Lawrence College
SLC 2002-

914.395.2296
muldavin@slc.edu

Additional contact: Judith Schwartzstein
914.395.2219

Portrait of Joshua Muldavin

Geography

Geography is a fundamentally interdisciplinary field, often seen as straddling the natural and social sciences and increasingly drawing upon the arts and other forms of expression and representation. For these reasons, Sarah Lawrence provides an exciting context as the community is predisposed to welcome Geography’s breadth and interdisciplinary qualities. Geography courses are infused with the central questions of the discipline. What is the relationship between human beings and “nature”? How does globalization change spatial patterns of historical, political, economic, social and cultural human activities? And how do these patterns provide avenues for understanding our contemporary world and pathways for the future?

Two seminars are taught on a regular basis: “Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development,” and “The Geography of Contemporary China and its place in a Globalizing World Economy”. In addition, a lecture course entitled “Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development“; provides students an opportunity to investigate these issues and their connections both in lecture and in group conference activities that include debates and special presentations.

As a discipline built on field study, students in Geography classes participate in fieldtrips, for example most recently to farming communities in Pennsylvania, but also to Manhattan’s Chinatown where students engage aspects of Chinese culture in walks through the city, exposing the heterogeneity of China through food, art, religion, and language, while simultaneously clarifying the challenges facing recent immigrants, and legacies of institutions imbued with racism carved into the built environment. That is one of the overarching goals of contemporary geography: to investigate the ways that landscape and place both reflect and reproduce the evolving relationship of humans to each other and to their environments.

Notes from the Field

Visit Joshua Muldavin's Notes from the Field, a website about a new phase of his long-term research and fieldwork in Asia.