AoR 26: Paul Starrs, Far Beyond Maps--Rangeland Geography by Art of Range published on 2019-12-04T18:22:26Z Lands are tied to people, and any changes in land use necessarily involve people. Understanding people and land together is the work of cultural and landscape geography. Paul Starrs is a geographer who has written some of the more interesting literature on the lifeways of range people. Tip and Paul discuss the culture of the West and challenges to ranching in a wide-ranging interview centered on Paul's opening chapter in the book "Ranching West of the 100th Meridian". WE NEED YOUR FEEDBACK! Please take 2 minutes to complete this short survey to help us continue funding the podcast: https://wsu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_9Y3fUWlQdBsyBZX RESOURCES MENTIONED ON THE SHOW: Many of Paul Starrs's publications are available at his ResearchGate page, https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Paul_Starrs/research. A brief biography and contact information can be found at his faculty page, https://www.unr.edu/geography/people/paul-starrs. The 1998 book "Ranching West of the 100th Meridian" is available for purchase at most online stores or by special order from your local bookstore. His book Let the Cowboy Ride is a more robust treatment of ranching in the American West than the title would suggest. This is a readable, scholarly exploration of "the peculiar conditions that created an abiding tension between ranchers and government in the western reaches of the United States, and to understand this tumult in the context of its time then and our time now" (from the author's introduction in the book). The book is available to order through various outlets. For those who are interested in Deep Springs College, their excellent website is https://www.deepsprings.edu/. TRANSCRIPT The full transcript of this episode is available at: https://bit.ly/2RnYlGX Genre Science