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WINNER OF THE CANTEMIR PRIZE 2012 awarded by the
Berendel Foundation
The Map Reader brings together, for the first time,
classic and hard-to-find articles on mapping. This book
provides a wide-ranging and coherent edited compendium of key
scholarly writing about the changing nature of cartography
over the last half century. The editorial selection of
fifty-four theoretical and thought provoking texts
demonstrates how cartography works as a powerful
representational form and explores how different mapping
practices have been conceptualised in particular scholarly
contexts.
Themes covered include paradigms, politics, people,
aesthetics and technology. Original interpretative essays set
the literature into intellectual context within these themes.
Excerpts are drawn from leading scholars and researchers in a
range of cognate fields including: Cartography, Geography,
Anthropology, Architecture, Engineering, Computer Science and
Graphic Design.
The Map Reader provides a new unique single source
reference to the essential literature in the cartographic
field:
- more than fifty specially edited excerpts from key,
classic articles and monographs
- critical introductions by experienced experts in the
field
- focused coverage of key mapping practices, techniques and
ideas
- a valuable resource suited to a broad spectrum of
researchers and students working in cartography and
GIScience, geography, the social sciences, media studies, and
visual arts
- full page colour illustrations of significant maps as
provocative visual ‘think-pieces’
- fully indexed, clearly structured and accessible ways
into a fast changing field of cartographic research
Co-edited by Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins, Senior Lecturers
in Human Geography in the School of Environment and
Development, the University of Manchester; and Rob Kitchin,
Professor of Geography, National University of Ireland,
Maynooth.
Content:
Chapter 1.1 Introductory Essay: Conceptualising Mapping (pages
1–7): Rob Kitchin, Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins
Chapter 1.2 General Theory, from Semiology of Graphics (pages
8–16): Jacques Bertin
Chapter 1.3 On Maps and Mapping, from The Nature of Maps:
Essays toward Understanding Maps and Mapping (pages 17–23):
Arthur H. Robinson and Barbara B. Petchenik
Chapter 1.4 The Science of Cartography and its Essential
Processes (pages 24–31): Joel L. Morrison
Chapter 1.5 Analytical Cartography (pages 32–36): Waldo R.
Tobler
Chapter 1.6 Cartographic Communication (pages 37–47):
Christopher Board
Chapter 1.7 Design on Signs/Myth and Meaning in Maps (pages
48–55): Denis Wood and John Fels
Chapter 1.8 Deconstructing the Map (pages 56–64): J. B.
Harley
Chapter 1.9 Drawing Things Together (pages 65–72): Bruno
Latour
Chapter 1.10 Cartography without ‘Progress’: Reinterpreting the
Nature and Historical Development of Mapmaking (pages 73–82):
Matthew H. Edney
Chapter 1.11 Exploratory Cartographic Visualisation: Advancing
the Agenda (pages 83–88): Alan M. MacEachren and Menno?Jan
Kraak
Chapter 1.12 The Agency of Mapping: Speculation, Critique and
Invention (pages 89–101): James Corner
Chapter 1.13 Beyond the ‘Binaries’: A Methodological
Intervention for Interrogating Maps as Representational
Practices (pages 102–107): Vincent J. Del Casino and Stephen P.
Hanna
Chapter 1.14 Rethinking Maps (pages 108–114): Rob Kitchin and
Martin Dodge
Chapter 2.1 Introductory Essay: Technologies of Mapping (pages
115–121): Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin and Chris Perkins
Chapter 2.2 A Century of Cartographic Change, from
Technological Transition in Cartography (pages 122–128): Mark
S. Monmonier
Chapter 2.3 Manufacturing Metaphors: Public Cartography, the
Market, and Democracy (pages 129–133): Patrick H.
McHaffie
Chapter 2.4 Maps and Mapping Technologies of the Persian Gulf
War (pages 134–136): Keith C. Clarke
Chapter 2.5 Automation and Cartography (pages 137–140): Waldo
R. Tobler
Chapter 2.6 Cartographic Futures on a Digital Earth (pages
141–146): Michael F. Goodchild
Chapter 2.7 Cartography and Geographic Information Systems
(pages 147–152): Phillip C. Muehrcke
Chapter 2.8 Remote Sensing of Urban/Suburban Infrastructure and
Socio?Economic Attributes (pages 153–163): John R. Jensen and
Dave C. Cowen
Chapter 2.9 Emergence of Map Projections, from Flattening the
Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections (pages 164–169):
John P. Synder
Chapter 2.10 Mobile Mapping: An Emerging Technology for Spatial
Data Acquisition (pages 170–177): Rongxing Li
Chapter 2.11 Extending the Map Metaphor Using Web Delivered
Multimedia (pages 178–184): William Cartwright
Chapter 2.12 Imaging the World: The State of Online Mapping
(pages 185–191): Tom Geller
Chapter 3.1 Introductory Essay: Cartographic Aesthetics and Map
Design (pages 193–200): Chris Perkins, Martin Dodge and Rob
Kitchin
Chapter 3.2 Interplay of Elements, from Cartographic Relief
Presentation (pages 201–214): Eduard Imhof
Chapter 3.3 Cartography as a Visual Technique, from The Look of
Maps (pages 215–218): Arthur H. Robinson
Chapter 3.4 Generalisation in Statistical Mapping (pages
219–230): George F. Jenks
Chapter 3.5 Strategies for the Visualisation of Geographic
Time?Series Data (pages 231–243): Mark Monmonier
Chapter 3.6 The Roles of Maps, from Some Truth with Maps: A
Primer on Symbolization and Design (pages 244–251): Alan M.
MacEachren
Chapter 3.7 Area Cartograms: Their Use and Creation (pages
252–260): Daniel Dorling
Chapter 3.8 ColorBrewer.org: An Online Tool for Selecting
Colour Schemes for Maps (pages 261–268): Mark Harrower and
Cynthia A. Brewer
Chapter 3.9 Maps, Mapping, Modernity: Art and Cartography in
the Twentieth Century (pages 269–277): Denis Cosgrove
Chapter 3.10 Affective Geovisualisations (pages 278–280):
Stuart Aitken and James Craine
Chapter 3.11 Egocentric Design of Map?Based Mobile Services
(pages 281–287): Liqiu Meng
Chapter 3.12 The Geographic Beauty of a Photographic Archive
(pages 288–296): Jason Dykes and Jo Wood
Chapter 4.1 Introductory Essay: Cognition and Cultures of
Mapping (pages 297–303): Chris Perkins, Rob Kitchin and Martin
Dodge
Chapter 4.2 Map Makers are Human: Comments on the Subjective in
Maps (pages 304–311): John K. Wright
Chapter 4.3 Cognitive Maps and Spatial Behaviour: Process and
Products (pages 312–317): Roger M. Downs and David Stea
Chapter 4.4 Natural Mapping (pages 318–326): James M.
Blaut
Chapter 4.5 The Map as Biography: Thoughts on Ordnance Survey
Map, Six?Inch Sheet Devonshire CIX, SE, Newton Abbot (pages
327–331): J. B. Harley
Chapter 4.6 Reading Maps (pages 332–338): Eileen Reeves
Chapter 4.7 Mapping Reeds and Reading Maps: The Politics of
Representation in Lake Titicaca (pages 339–353): Benjamin S.
Orlove
Chapter 4.8 Refiguring Geography: Parish Maps of Common Ground
(pages 354–361): David Crouch and David Matless
Chapter 4.9 Understanding and Learning Maps (pages 362–369):
Robert Lloyd
Chapter 4.10 Citizens as Sensors: The World of Volunteered
Geography (pages 370–378): Michael F. Goodchild
Chapter 4.11 Usability Evaluation of Web Mapping Sites (pages
379–386): Annu?Maaria Nivala, Stephen Brewster and Tiina
Sarjakoski
Chapter 5.1 Introductory Essay: Power and Politics of Mapping
(pages 387–394): Rob Kitchin, Martin Dodge and Chris
Perkins
Chapter 5.2 The Time and Space of the Enlightenment Project,
from The Condition of Postmodernity (pages 395–399): David
Harvey
Chapter 5.3 Texts, Hermeneutics and Propaganda Maps (pages
400–406): John Pickles
Chapter 5.4 Mapping: A New Technology of Space; Geo?Body, from
Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo?Body of a Nation (pages
407–411): Thongchai Winichakul
Chapter 5.5 First Principles of a Literary Cartography, from
Territorial Disputes: Maps and Mapping Strategies in
Contemporary Canadian and Australian Fiction (pages 412–421):
Graham Huggan
Chapter 5.6 Whose Woods are These? Counter?Mapping Forest
Territories in Kalimantan, Indonesia (pages 422–429): Nancy Lee
Peluso
Chapter 5.7 A Map that Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada,
Cartography, and the Narration of Nation (pages 430–439):
Matthew Sparke
Chapter 5.8 Cartographic Rationality and the Politics of
Geosurveillance and Security (pages 440–447): Jeremy W.
Crampton
Chapter 5.9 Affecting Geospatial Technologies: Toward a
Feminist Politics of Emotion (pages 448–455): Mei?Po Kwan
Chapter 5.10 Queering the Map: The Productive Tensions of
Colliding Epistemologies (pages 456–463): Michael Brown and
Larry Knopp
Chapter 5.11 Mapping the Digital Empire: Google Earth and the
Process of Postmodern Cartography (pages 464–470): Jason Farman