
Department of Geography
Condon Hall 107G
1251 University of Oregon
Eugene, Oregon 97403-1251
E-mail scohen@uoregon.edu
Telephone (541) 346-4500 Fax (541) 346-2067
This page serves as a gateway to basic information on my research and teaching activities at the University of Oregon. Please contact me or stop by if you are curious about any of the material included on the pages that are linked to it.
209 Geography of the Middle East - offered Fall term annually.
341 Population and Environment - offered Fall term annually.
410/510 Cultural Geography Winter '08
464/564 Tree & Forest in the Human Experience - offered Winter '07.
CRES 610 Zero Sum Conflict (offered in the Alternative Dispute Resolution Program in the Law School) Winter '07, Spring '08
HC 434 Northern Ireland in Transition (offered in the Honors College) Winter '07, Winter '08
607 Nature & Domination in Western Traditions - Winter 1999.
607 Geography, Ethics, and Democracy - Winter 2002.
607 Geography and Hegemony - Winter 2005.
607 Geography of War and Peace - Winter 2008.
For students participating in the Ethno-Territorial Reading Group you can follow the link, this site is password protected.
Finally, a poem to capture the mood...
Birches, Revisited: October
At last the silver birches look like Frost,
archaic as he must have seen them
in Vermont. My nostalgia's not for him,
but for the alders, priests who skim
the granite on our hill at any cost,
passing judgments on the ridge, the hem
of malls and sturdy parking lots
I cringe past and use. Tainted emblems of our lust
for sultry trinkets. Bodies pay their fees
for breathing, and all our tortured writhing
soothes us on our way to heaven.
Spirits suffer anyway, each fall.
Sentimental trees - spindly, cold and tall -
birches stand in spite of us and poetry
that praises "nature" like a long lost friend,
we who drive for groceries, shoes, and pens.
-Ira Sadoff
Finally, some powerful geographic metaphors from a speech given at the United Center in Chicago by Jesse Jackson in the summer of 1996. Food for domestic thought:
What is our challenge tonight? Just look around this place.
This publicly financed United Center is a new Chicago mountain top.
To the south Comisky Park, another mountain top.
To the west, Cook County Jail. Two
ball parks and a jail. In that jail
mostly youthful inmates, 80 percent drug positive, 90 percent high school
dropouts, 92 percent functionally illiterate, 75 percent recidivism rate.
They go back sicker and sicker.
Between these mountains of the ball park and the jail was
once Campbell's Soup and Sears and Zenith and Sunbeam and stock yards.
There were jobs and there was industry.
Now there's a canyon of welfare and despair.
This canyon exists in virtually every city in America.

Thanks to Aaron McGruder and Boondocks, who are too "political"
for my local newspaper....