讣告:J.W.R.怀特汉(1938-2021)

IF 3.6 3区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Michael P. Conzen, Peter J. Larkham
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He developed this interest in his PhD thesis but added substantially more material on building characteristics, feeling that previous morphological work had focused too much on simplified street plans (Conzen &amp; Oliveira, <span>2021</span>, pp. 76–81). He retained links with Reading, where he was awarded a DSc in 1992.</p><p>His first academic post was at the University of Newcastle, where he met M.R.G. Conzen—whose influence, both scholarly and personal (they shared a pronounced but very dry sense of humour) profoundly shaped Jeremy's career. The systematic aspect and interlocking nature of Conzen's descriptive and analytical concepts, the precision of his writing, and intricate hand-drawn cartography were highly influential, even though these features ‘struck some urban geographers as downright intimidating’ (Conzen &amp; Oliveira, <span>2021</span>, pp. 76–81). Whitehand's own writing proved similarly concise but more accessible. In the Newcastle department he also met Susan Friedrich, whom he would later marry.</p><p>Whitehand tested Conzen's articulation of the urban fringe belt concept at the scale of a whole conurbation in a study of Tyneside, and this resulted in his first major publication. A move to the University of Glasgow (1966–1971) brought new opportunities, including demonstrating that urban fringe belts could be explained statistically through the application of bid-rent theory and building cycles. Fringe belts were to occupy him, in one way or another, for much of his career.</p><p>In 1971 he moved to the University of Birmingham, founding a highly successful Urban Morphology Research Group, rising to Professor of Urban Geography in 1991, and retiring in 2005. His teaching ranged from introductory cultural geography through historical geography to a third-year specialist course in urban morphology. This last course he kept deliberately small, so that the group could fit in a minibus; citing the need for a working knowledge of German if recruitment ever threatened that limit. He supervised 58 research degrees, instilling in his students a strong work ethic, attention to detail, quality and focus, and a wish to live up to his expectations. This led them to quick completions and Jeremy to large bills for coffee.</p><p>Jeremy was something of an ‘organisation person’: he joined, contributed, and got things done, in an usually quiet and understated, but effective, way. He held a number of Institute of British Geographers (IBG)/Royal Geographical Society (RGS) positions, including Council member (IBG 1977–1980, RGS 1994–1995), Editorial Committee/Publications Committee and equivalents (IBG 1977–1985, RGS 1981–1995), and IBG Special Publications Editorial Board (1979–1985, as Secretary from 1981). He served as editor of <i>Area</i> in its early years (1977–1980), and brought his sense of humour and focus on precision to both its contents and its production. The humour was shown in the publication of occasional items such as ‘A Nonconformist extract’ (SRE, <span>1977</span>) while the precision was felt by virtually every author whose work he scrutinised and annotated (or deleted) in sharp pencil.</p><p>His networking abilities were evident at conferences, where he both ensured that his PhD students were widely introduced, and persuaded conference presenters to submit journal papers. This ability also led him, in the early 1990s, to work with colleagues across Europe and North America, working in geography, planning, architecture and history, to found the International Seminar on Urban Form—ISUF. From small invited seminars this has grown to a truly international organisation hosting major conferences and with nine active regional groups.</p><p>His editorial instinct led to the foundation of a new journal in 1997, on behalf of ISUF: <i>Urban Morphology</i>. He remained editor for 22 years, and many more authors saw that acuity and attention to detail, and benefited from careful guidance for the improvement of their papers even if they were ultimately rejected.</p><p>While Jeremy's own work focused on urban morphology and particularly fringe belts, he worked on town centres, suburbs, institutional campuses and more. A raft of papers, rich in concepts and detail, were neatly summarised in two books, both IBG Special Publications, in 1988 and 1991. The suburban work produced another book, <i>Twentieth-century suburbs</i>, in 2001. While deep in the local authority planning archives that underpinned this work he began another exploration of how these morphological phenomena came about, and this was his focus on agents and agency. This research approach led to broader considerations of relationships among agents of urban change, including the very geographical consideration of the diffusion of innovations in style and form from the metropolis to provincial centres and their suburbs.</p><p>Whitehand also began to consider conservation and planning processes as agents in the complex processes of urban change. This led to engagement with ideas of urban landscape management and urban design and, in particular, application of concepts and methods of geographical regionalisation to the systematic delineation of urban character areas. In many ways this was a clear development of Conzenian town-plan analysis. 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The systematic aspect and interlocking nature of Conzen's descriptive and analytical concepts, the precision of his writing, and intricate hand-drawn cartography were highly influential, even though these features ‘struck some urban geographers as downright intimidating’ (Conzen &amp; Oliveira, <span>2021</span>, pp. 76–81). Whitehand's own writing proved similarly concise but more accessible. In the Newcastle department he also met Susan Friedrich, whom he would later marry.</p><p>Whitehand tested Conzen's articulation of the urban fringe belt concept at the scale of a whole conurbation in a study of Tyneside, and this resulted in his first major publication. A move to the University of Glasgow (1966–1971) brought new opportunities, including demonstrating that urban fringe belts could be explained statistically through the application of bid-rent theory and building cycles. Fringe belts were to occupy him, in one way or another, for much of his career.</p><p>In 1971 he moved to the University of Birmingham, founding a highly successful Urban Morphology Research Group, rising to Professor of Urban Geography in 1991, and retiring in 2005. His teaching ranged from introductory cultural geography through historical geography to a third-year specialist course in urban morphology. This last course he kept deliberately small, so that the group could fit in a minibus; citing the need for a working knowledge of German if recruitment ever threatened that limit. He supervised 58 research degrees, instilling in his students a strong work ethic, attention to detail, quality and focus, and a wish to live up to his expectations. This led them to quick completions and Jeremy to large bills for coffee.</p><p>Jeremy was something of an ‘organisation person’: he joined, contributed, and got things done, in an usually quiet and understated, but effective, way. 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The suburban work produced another book, <i>Twentieth-century suburbs</i>, in 2001. While deep in the local authority planning archives that underpinned this work he began another exploration of how these morphological phenomena came about, and this was his focus on agents and agency. This research approach led to broader considerations of relationships among agents of urban change, including the very geographical consideration of the diffusion of innovations in style and form from the metropolis to provincial centres and their suburbs.</p><p>Whitehand also began to consider conservation and planning processes as agents in the complex processes of urban change. This led to engagement with ideas of urban landscape management and urban design and, in particular, application of concepts and methods of geographical regionalisation to the systematic delineation of urban character areas. In many ways this was a clear development of Conzenian town-plan analysis. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

2007年,杰瑞米·怀特汉在广州陈家祠。摄影:K. GuJ.W.R。怀特汉是伯明翰大学城市地理学荣誉教授,于2021年6月突然去世。杰里米1938年出生于雷丁。在学校里,受地理教科书作者罗伯特·w·布鲁克(Robert W. brooker)的地理教学的启发,他进入雷丁大学专攻地理。1954年,这家人搬到了阿默舍姆(Amersham)的一栋新都铎风格的大房子里。作为雷丁大学的一名本科生,杰里米发展了他的网球技术,并广泛地参加比赛,培养了他对地方特色的兴趣。他的学士学位论文是对阿默舍姆/切舍姆地区的调查,带有明显的形态学味道,在当时是不寻常的。他在博士论文中发展了这一兴趣,但在建筑特征方面增加了大量材料,他觉得以前的形态学工作过于关注简化的街道规划(Conzen &Oliveira, 2021,第76-81页)。他与雷丁大学保持着联系,并于1992年在雷丁大学获得了文学博士学位。他的第一个学术职位是在纽卡斯尔大学,在那里他遇到了M.R.G.康森,他的影响,无论是学术上还是个人(他们都有一种明显但非常干涩的幽默感)深刻地影响了杰里米的职业生涯。Conzen的描述和分析概念的系统性和环环相扣的性质,他的写作的精确性,以及复杂的手绘地图是非常有影响力的,尽管这些特征“让一些城市地理学家感到非常吓人”(Conzen &Oliveira, 2021,第76-81页)。怀特汉德自己的写作同样简洁,但更容易理解。在纽卡斯尔学院,他还遇到了苏珊·弗里德里希,后来他们结婚了。Whitehand在对Tyneside的研究中测试了Conzen在整个城市规模上对城市边缘带概念的表达,这导致了他的第一个主要出版物。搬到格拉斯哥大学(1966-1971)带来了新的机会,包括证明城市边缘带可以通过应用投标租金理论和建筑周期来统计解释。流苏腰带以这样或那样的方式占据了他职业生涯的大部分时间。1971年,他来到伯明翰大学,成立了一个非常成功的城市形态研究小组,1991年升任城市地理学教授,2005年退休。他的教学范围从文化地理学入门到历史地理学,再到三年级的城市形态学专业课程。最后一道菜,他特意少做了,这样大家就能坐上一辆小巴;理由是,如果招聘威胁到这一限制,就需要具备德语工作知识。他监督了58个研究学位,向他的学生灌输了强烈的职业道德、对细节的关注、质量和专注,以及不辜负他期望的愿望。这让他们很快就完成了任务,杰里米也花了很多钱买咖啡。杰里米在某种程度上是一个“组织人”:他以一种通常安静、低调但有效的方式参与、贡献并完成任务。他曾担任英国地理学家协会(IBG)/皇家地理学会(RGS)的多个职位,包括理事会成员(IBG 1977-1980年,RGS 1994-1995年),编辑委员会/出版委员会及同等职位(IBG 1977-1985年,RGS 1981 - 1995年),IBG特别出版物编辑委员会(1979-1985年,1981年起担任秘书)。他曾担任《区域》杂志早期的编辑(1977-1980),并将他的幽默感和对精确的关注融入到其内容和制作中。这种幽默偶尔出现在诸如《一个不墨守成规的摘录》(SRE, 1977)之类的出版物中,而几乎每个作者都能感受到这种精确,他会仔细检查他们的作品,并用锋利的铅笔注释(或删除)。他的社交能力在会议上表现得很明显,他既确保自己的博士生被广泛介绍,又说服会议主持人提交期刊论文。这种能力也使他在20世纪90年代初与欧洲和北美的同事合作,在地理,规划,建筑和历史方面工作,创建了国际城市形式研讨会- isuf。从小型的受邀研讨会,它已经发展成为一个真正的国际组织,举办大型会议,并有9个活跃的区域集团。他的编辑本能促使他在1997年代表ISUF创办了一本新杂志:《城市形态学》。他做了22年的编辑,更多的作者看到了他的敏锐和对细节的关注,并受益于精心的指导来改进他们的论文,即使他们最终被拒绝。虽然杰里米自己的作品专注于城市形态,特别是边缘地带,但他的作品涉及城镇中心、郊区、机构校园等。 大量的论文,丰富的概念和细节,被整齐地总结在两本书中,分别于1988年和1991年出版,都是IBG特别出版物。2001年,郊区的工作又出了一本书,《二十世纪郊区》。在深入研究支撑这项工作的地方政府规划档案时他开始了另一项探索这些形态现象是如何产生的,这是他对代理人和代理的关注。这种研究方法导致了对城市变化动因之间关系的更广泛考虑,包括对风格和形式创新从大都市向省级中心及其郊区扩散的地理考虑。Whitehand也开始考虑保护和规划过程作为城市变化的复杂过程的代理人。这导致了对城市景观管理和城市设计思想的参与,特别是将地理区划的概念和方法应用于系统地描绘城市特色区域。在很多方面,这都是对康兹尼的城市规划分析的一个明显的发展。怀特汉的工作得到了利华休姆基金会、英国科学院和国家环境委员会的支持,后者是因为他对规划的兴趣导致了边缘地带、城镇规划和生态/绿色空间的概念融合。正式退休后,怀特汉仍然很活跃,事实上,他还推动了另一项研究计划。这是为了孕育中国城市形态的发展,他通过国际、跨学科和比较的工作来实现这一目标。与北京大学的联系使其在城市与区域规划系成立了一个城市形态研究小组。他继续定期访问中国进行实地考察,担任山西大学名誉教授(2005-2008)和山西省平遥县城市规划顾问(2006-2021)。他的地理学视角为中国地理学和规划学提供了理论和实践上的启示。考虑这样一个人对解释我们的建筑环境的广泛但往往不成熟的思想和工作领域的影响是合适的,特别是当我们接近地球历史上可能是关键的转折点时。杰里米对城市进程的看法始终是有根据的、开放的、永无止境的探索。他发展并国际化了城市形态的研究,将其从被称为“城市地理学的死水”(Carter, 1984)转变为具有国际影响力的充满活力的学科。他的影响不仅通过退休后的节日庆典得以传播(拉克姆&Conzen, 2014),但不同寻常的是,这本书致力于探索他的城市研究的多个方向的影响(Oliveira, 2019)。杰里米的工作和个性在他整整60年的职业生涯中播下了丰硕的种子。他一直很活跃,忙着指导博士生,研究和写论文,包括一篇主题论文(由于COVID限制而录制),该论文在他去世几天后提交给了ISUF会议。杰里米·怀特汉深受朋友、同事和学生的喜爱和尊敬。我们将深深地怀念他。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Obituary: J.W.R. Whitehand (1938–2021)

Obituary: J.W.R. Whitehand (1938–2021)

Jeremy Whitehand in Chenjiaci, Guangzhou, 2007. Photograph: K. Gu

J.W.R. Whitehand, Emeritus Professor of Urban Geography at the University of Birmingham, died suddenly in June 2021. Jeremy was born in 1938 in Reading. Stimulated at school by the geography teaching of Robert W. Brooker—author of geographical texts—he went on to specialise in geography at the University of Reading. In 1954 the family moved to Amersham, to a large neo-Tudor house that featured in a later publication.

As an undergraduate at Reading, Jeremy developed his tennis skills and travelled widely to tournaments, building his interest in the specific character of places. His bachelor's dissertation was a survey of the Amersham/Chesham district, with a distinctly morphological flavour, unusual for the time. He developed this interest in his PhD thesis but added substantially more material on building characteristics, feeling that previous morphological work had focused too much on simplified street plans (Conzen & Oliveira, 2021, pp. 76–81). He retained links with Reading, where he was awarded a DSc in 1992.

His first academic post was at the University of Newcastle, where he met M.R.G. Conzen—whose influence, both scholarly and personal (they shared a pronounced but very dry sense of humour) profoundly shaped Jeremy's career. The systematic aspect and interlocking nature of Conzen's descriptive and analytical concepts, the precision of his writing, and intricate hand-drawn cartography were highly influential, even though these features ‘struck some urban geographers as downright intimidating’ (Conzen & Oliveira, 2021, pp. 76–81). Whitehand's own writing proved similarly concise but more accessible. In the Newcastle department he also met Susan Friedrich, whom he would later marry.

Whitehand tested Conzen's articulation of the urban fringe belt concept at the scale of a whole conurbation in a study of Tyneside, and this resulted in his first major publication. A move to the University of Glasgow (1966–1971) brought new opportunities, including demonstrating that urban fringe belts could be explained statistically through the application of bid-rent theory and building cycles. Fringe belts were to occupy him, in one way or another, for much of his career.

In 1971 he moved to the University of Birmingham, founding a highly successful Urban Morphology Research Group, rising to Professor of Urban Geography in 1991, and retiring in 2005. His teaching ranged from introductory cultural geography through historical geography to a third-year specialist course in urban morphology. This last course he kept deliberately small, so that the group could fit in a minibus; citing the need for a working knowledge of German if recruitment ever threatened that limit. He supervised 58 research degrees, instilling in his students a strong work ethic, attention to detail, quality and focus, and a wish to live up to his expectations. This led them to quick completions and Jeremy to large bills for coffee.

Jeremy was something of an ‘organisation person’: he joined, contributed, and got things done, in an usually quiet and understated, but effective, way. He held a number of Institute of British Geographers (IBG)/Royal Geographical Society (RGS) positions, including Council member (IBG 1977–1980, RGS 1994–1995), Editorial Committee/Publications Committee and equivalents (IBG 1977–1985, RGS 1981–1995), and IBG Special Publications Editorial Board (1979–1985, as Secretary from 1981). He served as editor of Area in its early years (1977–1980), and brought his sense of humour and focus on precision to both its contents and its production. The humour was shown in the publication of occasional items such as ‘A Nonconformist extract’ (SRE, 1977) while the precision was felt by virtually every author whose work he scrutinised and annotated (or deleted) in sharp pencil.

His networking abilities were evident at conferences, where he both ensured that his PhD students were widely introduced, and persuaded conference presenters to submit journal papers. This ability also led him, in the early 1990s, to work with colleagues across Europe and North America, working in geography, planning, architecture and history, to found the International Seminar on Urban Form—ISUF. From small invited seminars this has grown to a truly international organisation hosting major conferences and with nine active regional groups.

His editorial instinct led to the foundation of a new journal in 1997, on behalf of ISUF: Urban Morphology. He remained editor for 22 years, and many more authors saw that acuity and attention to detail, and benefited from careful guidance for the improvement of their papers even if they were ultimately rejected.

While Jeremy's own work focused on urban morphology and particularly fringe belts, he worked on town centres, suburbs, institutional campuses and more. A raft of papers, rich in concepts and detail, were neatly summarised in two books, both IBG Special Publications, in 1988 and 1991. The suburban work produced another book, Twentieth-century suburbs, in 2001. While deep in the local authority planning archives that underpinned this work he began another exploration of how these morphological phenomena came about, and this was his focus on agents and agency. This research approach led to broader considerations of relationships among agents of urban change, including the very geographical consideration of the diffusion of innovations in style and form from the metropolis to provincial centres and their suburbs.

Whitehand also began to consider conservation and planning processes as agents in the complex processes of urban change. This led to engagement with ideas of urban landscape management and urban design and, in particular, application of concepts and methods of geographical regionalisation to the systematic delineation of urban character areas. In many ways this was a clear development of Conzenian town-plan analysis. Whitehand's work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust, British Academy and NERC—the latter because his interest in planning had led to the conceptual fusion of fringe belts, town planning and ecology/greenspace.

Following his formal retirement Whitehand remained active, and indeed he pushed forward with yet another research initiative. This was to incubate the development of urban morphology in China, which he did through international, interdisciplinary and comparative work. Links with Peking University in Beijing led to the formation of an Urban Morphology Research Group in its Department of Urban and Regional Planning. He continued with regular visits to China for fieldwork, was Honorary Professor at the University of Shanxi (2005–2008) and Urban Planning Consultant for Pingyao County in Shanxi Province (2006–2021). His geographical perspective was informing both Chinese geography and planning in both theoretical and practical ways.

It is fitting to consider the impact such a person can have on a wide but often inchoate realm of thought and work interpreting our built environments, especially as we approach what may be critical tipping points in Earth's history. Jeremy's view of urban processes was always grounded, open-minded, and endlessly enquiring. He developed and internationalised the study of urban form, changing it from what had been termed a ‘backwater of urban geography’ (Carter, 1984) to a vibrant discipline with international reach and impact. His influence was also spread not only by a post-retirement festschrift (Larkham & Conzen, 2014) but, unusually, a book dedicated to exploring the impact of the multiple directions of his urban research (Oliveira, 2019).

Jeremy's work and personality have sown productive seeds over the six full decades of his professional life. He was active to the very end, busy supervising PhD students, researching and writing papers, including a keynote paper (recorded owing to COVID restrictions), which was presented to an ISUF conference just days after his death. Jeremy Whitehand was liked and respected widely by friends, colleagues, and students alike. He will be sorely missed in the discipline and beyond.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.30%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Geographical Journal has been the academic journal of the Royal Geographical Society, under the terms of the Royal Charter, since 1893. It publishes papers from across the entire subject of geography, with particular reference to public debates, policy-orientated agendas.
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