Cartography I

This report examines current developments in geohumanities and work on so-called ‘deep maps’, as well as considering work building on artistic practice and literary mapping traditions. I discuss developments in the history of cartography and consider the value of old maps in relation to the interests of human geographers and wider notions of popular geography. More engagement with these areas of mapping practice could help bridge the long-standing disconnect between much of contemporary human geography and more mainstream cartographic research.

[1]  Mapping Shakespeare’s World , 2016, The Cambridge Guide to the Worlds of Shakespeare.

[2]  Sarah Johnson British Town Maps: A History , 2017 .

[3]  Karen Culcasi Images and Imaginings of Palestine: Territory and Everyday Geopolitics for Palestinian Jordanians , 2016 .

[4]  Judith A. Tyner Mapping Women: Scholarship on Women in the History of Cartography , 2016 .

[5]  Lorenz Hurni,et al.  Toward Dream Cartography: Mapping Dream Space and Content , 2015, Cartogr. Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Geovisualization.

[6]  John G. Moore Glasgow: Mapping the City , 2015 .

[7]  J. Black Metropolis: Mapping the City , 2015 .

[8]  Regular routes: deep mapping a performative counterpractice for the daily commute , 2015 .

[9]  Anne Kelly Knowles,et al.  Inductive Visualization: A Humanistic Alternative to GIS , 2015 .

[10]  Annette M. Kim Sidewalk City: Remapping Public Space in Ho Chi Minh City , 2015 .

[11]  Reuben Rose-Redwood,et al.  Introduction: The Limits to Deconstructing the Map , 2015, Cartogr. Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Geovisualization.

[12]  Sarah Elwood,et al.  Feminist geographies of new spatial media , 2015 .

[13]  M. Crang The promises and perils of a digital geohumanities , 2015 .

[14]  T. Sharpe The birth of the geological map , 2015, Science.

[15]  E. Boria Representing the Politics of Borders: Unorthodox Maps in Reclus, Mackinder and Others , 2015 .

[16]  A. Novaes Map Art and Popular Geopolitics: Mapping Borders Between Colombia and Venezuela , 2015 .

[17]  T. Harris,et al.  Deep Maps and Spatial Narratives , 2015 .

[18]  M. Monmonier Adventures in Academic Cartography: A Memoir , 2014 .

[19]  C. Fleet,et al.  Edinburgh: Mapping the City , 2014 .

[20]  Alex Singleton,et al.  Escaping the Pushpin Paradigm in Geographic Information Science: (Re)presenting National Crime Data. , 2014 .

[21]  Toward spatial humanities : historical GIS and spatial history , 2014 .

[22]  Timothy Barney Mapping the Cold War , 2014 .

[23]  Monica Stephens Gender and the GeoWeb: divisions in the production of user-generated cartographic information , 2013, GeoJournal.

[24]  Laura Kurgan,et al.  Close Up at a Distance: Mapping, Technology, and Politics , 2013 .

[25]  Peter. Chaddeaud MAPPING THE FIRST WORLD WAR , 2013 .

[26]  Karl H. Offen,et al.  Historical geography I , 2012 .

[27]  Michael Dear,et al.  GeoHumanities : Art, History, Text at the Edge of Place , 2011 .

[28]  M. Dodge,et al.  Reclaiming the Map: British Geography and Ambivalent Cartographic Practice , 2008 .

[29]  Alice Hudson,et al.  Preliminary Checklist of Pre-Twentieth-Century Women in Cartography , 2000, Cartogr. Int. J. Geogr. Inf. Geovisualization.

[30]  Franco Moretti,et al.  Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 , 1998 .

[31]  J. B. Harley,et al.  DECONSTRUCTING THE MAP , 1989 .