International Women's Day recognizes and honours the incredible contributions that women have made throughout history and in all spheres of life. It also celebrates the progress made towards gender equality. The United Nations designated the theme for 2024 as "Invest in Women: Accelerate Progress." This theme focuses on addressing economic inequalities faced by women. It highlights the importance of investing in areas like education, healthcare, and leadership development for women. The International Women's Day campaign theme for 2024 is "Inspire Inclusion." This theme emphasizes the importance of diversity and empowerment across all sectors of society.
I would like to share the story of an incredible woman and American geographer, Ellen Churchill Semple.
Who was Ellen Churchill Semple?
She was an American Geographer who came from a wealthy family. She received a good education, attended private schools, and graduated from Vassar College in 1882. After graduation, Semple travelled extensively throughout Europe and Asia, further fueling her interest in geography.
Major Ideas of Ellen Churchill Semple
She impressed Ratzel with her intellect and became his translator, introducing his ideas from German to the English-speaking world. They collaborated on translating Ratzel's major work, "Anthropogeographie," into a version digestible for the "Anglo-American mind."
While a controversial theory today, Semple's work on environmental determinism, which suggests the physical environment shapes human societies, was a prominent geographical concept in her time. Her book "American History and Its Geographic Conditions" (1903) is a notable example. She expressed her deterministic views in the book "Influences of Geographic Environment" (1911). This is very well reflected in the following quote from her book.
Man is a product of the earth's surface. This means not merely that he is a child of the earth, the dust of her dust, but that the earth has mothered him, fed him, set him tasks, directed his thoughts, confronted him with difficulties that have strengthened his body and sharpened his wits, given him his problems of navigation or irrigation, and at the same time whispered hints for their solution.
Despite not completing her Ph.D. under Fredrich Ratzel, Miss Ellen Semple is considered Ratzel's greatest pupil. Similarly, in the Mahabharata, Guru Dronacharya, a renowned warrior, refused to train Karna because he was not from a noble clan. But in the face of the setback, Karna, with undeniable dedication, excelled and became a formidable archer.
How Semple Overcame Gender Discrimination
Miss Semple was fascinated by the role of geography in history and sought a deeper understanding. This led her to the renowned German geographer Friedrich Ratzel, a pioneer in anthropogeography (the study of human-environment interactions). Semple pursued graduate studies in history and geography at Leipzig University in Germany. While some universities restricted women's participation, Leipzig was known for its more progressive approach.
At Leipzig, she was the only woman among hundreds of male students. Initially, Semple was not allowed to attend lectures at Leipzig. However, due to her persistence, she secured permission to attend Ratzel's lectures at Leipzig University in the early 1890s. Though Leipzig was progressive for the time, she was not allowed to receive a PhD due to her gender. She later returned to the United States and secured a teaching position at Clark University, becoming a leading figure in environmental determinism, a geographical school of thought popular at the time. Semple became the first woman president of the Association of American Geographers (AAAG) in 1921, breaking a significant barrier in a male-dominated field.
Conclusion
Ellen Churchill Semple's success as a prominent geographer paved the way for future generations of women to pursue careers in geography and other sciences. Contemporary geography has changed a lot. Now, geographers study how men and women experience and navigate public spaces, workplaces, and even their own homes differently. A new subfield has emerged known as Gender Geography.