Tamar Y. Rothenberg is editor of New Youth Connections.
'An important contribution to the history of geography. It provides real insight both into how a small group of well-connected Americans was able to articulate and disseminate a cultural and geopolitical vision of the United States during the first half of the twentieth century, and why geography became thought of by Americans as a popular rather than an academic subject. ' James S. Duncan, University of Cambridge, UK 'With energetic prose, Rothenberg analyzes not just the National Geographic's text and photographs, but some of its most important authors, editors, and photographers as well. The result is a sustained look into the inner workings of one of the most influential magazines of the twentieth century. Presenting America's World is a welcome addition to the literature on popular geography.' Susan Schulten, University of Denver, USA '...Rothenberg engages conversationally with archival material, maintaining transparency and liveliness and underscoring the need to perpetuate dialogue between past and present. Recommended.' Choice 'Histories of geography largely ignore the role of the National Geographic and similar magazines in their focus on the academic discipline. Yet such media have been major forces influencing the development of popular geographies ...Thus understanding how those popular geographies have been produced through the ideologies of the owners and editors of those magazines is key to a full appreciation of geography's trajectory as both subject and discipline. Tamar Rothenberg's book is a worthy addition to the small literature undertaking that task, providing major insights into the people who fashioned a magazine that has played a considerable part in structuring Americans' world views.' Geografiska Annaler B: Human Geography 'This book is an interesting, critical, and admirable contribution to the rematerialising Cultural Geography series from British-based publisher Ashgate.' Patricia Baldwin