Details

The Map Reader


The Map Reader

Theories of Mapping Practice and Cartographic Representation
1. Aufl.

von: Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin, Chris Perkins

104,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 09.05.2011
ISBN/EAN: 9780470980071
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 512

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>WINNER OF THE CANTEMIR PRIZE 2012 awarded by the Berendel Foundation</b></p> <p><b>The Map Reader</b> 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.</p> <p>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.</p> <p><b>The Map Reader</b> provides a new unique single source reference to the essential literature in the cartographic field:</p> <ul> <li>more than fifty specially edited excerpts from key, classic articles and monographs</li> <li>critical introductions by experienced experts in the field</li> <li>focused coverage of key mapping practices, techniques and ideas</li> <li>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</li> <li>full page colour illustrations of significant maps as provocative visual ‘think-pieces’</li> <li>fully indexed, clearly structured and accessible ways into a fast changing field of cartographic research</li> </ul>
<p>The Editors xvii</p> <p>Preface xix</p> <p>Acknowledgements xxv</p> <p><b>Colour Plate One: Cartographic Production (On the inside front cover)</b></p> <p><b>Section One Conceptualising Mapping 1</b></p> <p>1.1 Introductory Essay: Conceptualising Mapping, by <i>Rob Kitchin</i>, <i>Martin Dodge</i> and <i>Chris Perkins</i> 2</p> <p>1.2 General Theory, from Semiology of Graphics, by <i>Jacques Bertin</i> 8<br /> The first formal specification for semiotic rules controlling the representation of different kinds of information in a graphical form.</p> <p>1.3 On Maps and Mapping, from The Nature of Maps: Essays Toward Understanding Maps and Mapping, by <i>Arthur H. Robinson</i> and <i>Barbara B. Petchenik</i> 17<br /> An important contribution to the status of maps and mapping reflecting on the need for cognitive and perceptual approaches to map design and cartography as visual communication.</p> <p>1.4 The Science of Cartography and its Essential Processes, by <i>Joel L. Morrison</i> 24<br /> An overview of cartography as communications science and justification for a progressive and experimental approach.</p> <p>1.5 Analytical Cartography, by <i>Waldo R. Tobler</i> 32<br /> An early call for a rethinking of cartography deploying a more analytical approach grounded in theory and deploying mathematical principles.</p> <p>1.6 Cartographic Communication, by <i>Christopher Board</i> 37<br /> One of the most complete discussions of the communications paradigm and the role of modelling the flow of cartographic information.</p> <p>1.7 Design on Signs / Myth and Meaning in Maps, by Denis Wood and John Fels 48<br /> A structuralist reading of cartography as a sign system exploring how codes operate to naturalise the cultural work of the map.</p> <p>1.8 Deconstructing the Map, by <i>J.B. Harley</i> 56<br /> An influential call for a more engaged, critical and social constructivist approach to mapping drawing upon notions of the map as a form of power knowledge.</p> <p>1.9 Drawing Things Together, by <i>Bruno Latour</i> 65<br /> Argues that visualisations play central roles in the practices of knowledge construction and establishes how the map might function as an immutable mobile.</p> <p>1.10 Cartography Without ‘Progress’: Reinterpreting the Nature and Historical Development of Mapmaking, by <i>Matthew H. Edney</i> 73<br /> Argues for an anti-progressive view of cartography as an assemblage in which different modes of knowing the world emerge from local contexts.</p> <p>1.11 Exploratory Cartographic Visualisation: Advancing the Agenda, by <i>Alan M. MacEachren </i>and <i>Menno-Jan Kraak</i> 83<br /> Sets out a research agenda for a more exploratory and interactive mapping emerging from technological and epistemological change of the early 1990s.</p> <p>1.12 The Agency of Mapping: Speculation, Critique and Invention, by <i>James Corner</i> 89<br /> A persuasive argument for the creative and emancipatory potential of mapping as a set of practices exemplified by work in architecture and planning.</p> <p>1.13 Beyond the ‘Binaries’: A Methodological Intervention for Interrogating Maps as Representational Practices, by <i>Vincent J. Del Casino Jr.</i> and <i>Stephen P. Hanna</i> 102<br /> A call to move beyond orthodox binary thinking and to adopt a more performative approach to mapping informed by feminist critiques.</p> <p>1.14 Rethinking Maps, by <i>Rob Kitchin</i> and <i>Martin Dodge</i> 108<br /> Rejects the idea of mapping as ontic knowledge, focusing instead upon its processual and emergent qualities as a context-dependant and relational problem solving technology.</p> <p><b>Colour Plate Two: Mapping the Internet</b></p> <p><b>Section Two Technologies of Mapping 115</b></p> <p>2.1 Introductory Essay: Technologies of Mapping, by <i>Martin Dodge</i>, <i>Rob Kitchin</i> and <i>Chris Perkins</i> 116</p> <p>2.2 A Century of Cartographic Change, from Technological Transition in Cartography, by <i>Mark S. Monmonier</i> 122<br /> A progressive overview of technological change in the first eight decades of the twentieth century, focusing upon the nature, combinations and rates of change in mapmaking.</p> <p>2.3 Manufacturing Metaphors: Public Cartography, the Market, and Democracy, by <i>Patrick H. McHaffie</i> 129<br /> Charts the connections between technological change and the labour process in the context of mass production of official mapping.</p> <p>2.4 Maps and Mapping Technologies of the Persian Gulf War, by <i>Keith C. Clarke</i> 134<br /> Explores the impacts of war on mapping technologies through a case study on United States military activity in the first gulf war.</p> <p>2.5 Automation and Cartography, by <i>Waldo R. Tobler</i> 137<br /> A pioneering consideration of the potential of using the computer in map data, storage analysis output and display.</p> <p>2.6 Cartographic Futures on a Digital Earth, by <i>Michael F. Goodchild</i> 141<br /> A view from the late 1990s reflecting upon the power of digital technology to widen access to mapping but also diminish traditional visual cartographic skills.</p> <p>2.7 Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, by <i>Phillip C. Muehrcke</i> 147<br /> Explores the emerging relationship between the map and GIS and considers what remains unmappable with GI technologies.</p> <p>2.8 Remote Sensing of Urban/Suburban Infrastructure and Socio-Economic Attributes, by <i>John R. Jensen</i> and <i>Dave C. Cowen</i> 153<br /> Considers how remotely-sensed technologies can supplement more traditional urban mapping practices.</p> <p>2.9 Emergence of Map Projections, from Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections, by <i>John P. Synder</i> 164<br /> An overview of the changing form and deployment of map projections reflecting on the flexibility of computer processing facilitating diverse choices, but also the continuing limits on appropriate use.</p> <p>2.10 Mobile Mapping: An Emerging Technology for Spatial Data Acquisition, by <i>Rongxing li</i> 170<br /> A paper from the late 1990s illustrating the potential of mobile data collection methods subsequently realised in consumer services like Google Street View.</p> <p>2.11 Extending the Map Metaphor Using Web Delivered Multimedia, by <i>William Cartwright</i> 178<br /> An illustration of how multi-mediated interaction can deliver new kinds of information design in game like and hyper-linked interfaces.</p> <p>2.12 Imaging the World: The State of Online Mapping, by <i>Tom Geller</i> 185<br /> Provides a snapshot of the state of mass interactive mappingon-demand served from online corporate portals and community projects.</p> <p><b>Colour Plate Three: Pictorial Mapping</b></p> <p><b>Section Three Cartographic Aesthetics and Map Design 193</b></p> <p>3.1 Introductory Essay: Cartographic Aesthetics and Map Design, by <i>Chris Perkins</i>, <i>Martin Dodge</i> and <i>Rob Kitchin</i> 194</p> <p>3.2 Interplay of Elements, from Cartographic Relief Presentation, by <i>Eduard Imhof</i> 201<br /> Discusses the importance of relationship between visual forms in the design of topographic mapping, with a particular focus on challenges of mountain cartography.</p> <p>3.3 Cartography as a Visual Technique, from The Look of Maps, by <i>Arthur H. Robinson</i> 215<br /> Justifies the need for a visual approach to mapping, focusing in particular upon the design of thematic maps.</p> <p>3.4 Generalisation in Statistical Mapping, by <i>George F. Jenks</i> 219<br /> A consideration of the impacts of different kinds of generalization and classification on the patterns presented in quantitative cartography.</p> <p>3.5 Strategies for the Visualisation of Geographic Time-Series Data, by <i>Mark Monmonier</i> 231<br /> An early classification and conceptual framework for the consideration of mapping that simultaneously depicts time and space in an effective manner.</p> <p>3.6 The Roles of Maps, from Some Truth with Maps: A Primer on Symbolization and Design, by <i>Alan M. MacEachren</i> 244<br /> Reflects on the roles of design in decision making in the era of data exploration, confirmation, synthesis and presentation.</p> <p>3.7 Area Cartograms: Their Use and Creation, by <i>Daniel Dorling</i> 252<br /> Discusses the history design and use of different kinds of cartograms with a particular focus on their potential in mapping socio-economic and political data.</p> <p>3.8 ColorBrewer.org: An Online Tool for Selecting Colour Schemes for Maps, by <i>Mark Harrower</i> and <i>Cynthia A. Brewer</i> 261<br /> Describes the development and potential of an online tool for guiding appropriate selection of colour schemes for the representation of quantitative data in choropleth mapping.</p> <p>3.9 Maps, Mapping, Modernity: Art and Cartography in the Twentieth Century, by <i>Denis Cosgrove</i> 269<br /> Charts relations between art and mapping in the early twentieth century highlighting ongoing collaboration in a period when orthodox views suggested separate practices.</p> <p>3.10 Affective Geovisualisations, by <i>Stuart Aitken</i> and <i>James Craine</i> 278<br /> Highlights what can be learnt from film and suggests geovisualisations should engage more with affect and emotion.</p> <p>3.11 Egocentric Design of Map-Based Mobile Services, by <i>Liqiu Meng</i> 281<br /> Focuses on the design requirements for short-term and transient images revealed in egocentric displays that characterise map-based mobile services.</p> <p>3.12 The Geographic Beauty of a Photographic Archive, by <i>Jason Dykes</i> and <i>Jo Wood</i> 288<br /> Explores how the beauty of data can be revealed through the creative deployment of treemaps in an analysis the Geograph data set.</p> <p><b>Colour Plate Four: Visualising Cartographic Colour Schemes and Mapping Spatial Information Space</b></p> <p><b>Section Four Cognition and Cultures of Mapping 297</b></p> <p>4.1 Introductory Essay: Cognition and Cultures of Mapping, by <i>Chris Perkins</i>, <i>Rob Kitchin </i>and <i>Martin Dodge</i> 298</p> <p>4.2 Map Makers are Human: Comments on the Subjective in Maps, by <i>John K. Wright</i> 304<br /> An influential and early clarion call for research into the roles people and their subjectivities play in the mapping process.</p> <p>4.3 Cognitive Maps and Spatial Behaviour: Process and Products, by <i>Roger M. Downs</i> and <i>David Stea</i> 312<br /> An overview of behavioural geographic understanding of cognitive mapping that argues for the need for experimental investigation and establishes basic principles.</p> <p>4.4 Natural Mapping, by <i>James M. Blaut</i> 318<br /> Provides an argument and empirical evidence for a cross cultural development of map skill acquisition, especially in children.</p> <p>4.5 The Map as Biography: Thoughts on Ordnance Survey Map, Six-Inch Sheet Devonshire CIX, SE, Newton Abbot, by <i>J.B. Harley</i> 327<br /> A personal reflection on the interplay between a single historic topographic survey sheet and the ways it narrates different biographical associations with place.</p> <p>4.6 Reading Maps, by <i>Eileen Reeves</i> 332<br /> An exploration of the cultural meanings attached to cartography through the map reading process that tracks the shift from a textual to visual view of the medium and considers the gendering of maps.</p> <p>4.7 Mapping Reeds and Reading Maps: The Politics of Representation in Lake Titicaca, by <i>Benjamin S. Orlove</i> 339<br /> A social anthropological consideration of tensions, actions and discourses involved in a local resource conflict and how maps and mapping are enrolled into cultural politics.</p> <p>4.8 Refiguring Geography: Parish Maps of Common Ground, by <i>David Crouch</i> and <i>David Matless</i> 354<br /> A reflection on how place emerges through a community mapping project which highlights the interplay of politics, aesthetics and practice.</p> <p>4.9 Understanding and Learning Maps, by <i>Robert Lloyd</i> 362<br /> An overview of changing trajectories of cognitive map research charting development from early psychophysical experiments to more nuanced theoretical work.</p> <p>4.10 Citizens as Sensors: The World of Volunteered Geography, by <i>Michael F. Goodchild</i> 370<br /> Describes and explains the nature and emergence of crowdsourced mapping and assesses its potential contribution to the social production of cartography.</p> <p>4.11 Usability Evaluation of Web Mapping Sites, by <i>Annu-Maaria Nivala, Stephen Brewster</i> and <i>L. Tiina Sarjakoski</i> 379<br /> Provides an empirical comparison of web mapping portals illustrating the potential of usability engineering as a tool to evaluate and improve interface design.</p> <p><b>Colour Plate Five: Visualising the Efforts of Volunteer Cartographers</b></p> <p><b>Section Five Power and Politics of Mapping 387</b></p> <p>5.1 Introductory Essay: Power and Politics of Mapping, by <i>Rob Kitchin</i>, <i>Martin Dodge</i> and <i>Chris Perkins</i> 388</p> <p>5.2 The Time and Space of the Enlightenment Project, from The Condition of Postmodernity, by <i>David Harvey</i> 395<br /> An historical analysis of perspectivism and Cartesian rationality in cartography which facilitated capital accumulation.</p> <p>5.3 Texts, Hermeneutics and Propaganda Maps, by <i>John Pickles</i> 400<br /> A textual approach to cartographic power focusing on an interpretive case study of the cultural work of propaganda maps.</p> <p>5.4 Mapping: A New Technology of Space; Geo-Body, from Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-Body of a Nation, by <i>Thongchai Winichakul</i> 407<br /> An insightful case study exploring the constitutive role of maps in the making of imaginative geographies of nationhood.</p> <p>5.5 First Principles of a Literary Cartography, from Territorial Disputes: Maps and Mapping Strategies in Contemporary Canadian and Australian Fiction, by <i>Graham Huggan</i> 412<br /> Examines the potential of cartography to control, but reminds us of the destabilising potential of maps in feminist and ethnic literature, serving as both texts and textual events.</p> <p>5.6 Whose Woods are These? Counter-Mapping Forest Territories in Kalimantan, Indonesia, by <i>Nancy Lee Peluso</i> 422<br /> Discusses how state interests deploy mapping as a powerful discourse, but also reveals the potential of counter-mapping by NGOs and local people.</p> <p>5.7 A Map that Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation, by <i>Matthew Sparke</i> 430<br /> A postcolonial approach to maps as contra-punctual moments in the struggle for identity and space, developed through an analysis of Canadian mapping encounters.</p> <p>5.8 Cartographic Rationality and the Politics of Geosurveillance and Security, by <i>Jeremy W. Crampton</i> 440<br /> An historical analysis of the role of mapping as a surveillant technology deployed as part of governmental regimes to rationalise and discipline citizens.</p> <p>5.9 Affecting Geospatial Technologies: Toward a Feminist Politics of Emotion, by <i>Mei-Po Kwan</i> 448<br /> Argues for a vision of geo-spatial technologies informed by feminist ideas and notions of affect, that incorporates an emotional and embodied approach to mapping practices.</p> <p>5.10 Queering the Map: The Productive Tensions of Colliding Epistemologies, by <i>Michael Brown</i> and <i>Larry Knopp</i> 456<br /> Explores the tensions between queer geographies and Cartesian rationality, revealed in ontological and epistemological differences in a community mapping project.</p> <p>5.11 Mapping the Digital Empire: Google Earth and the Process of Postmodern Cartography, by <i>Jason Farman</i> 464<br /> An exploration of the emancipatory potential of Web 2.0 interfaces, reflecting on the remaking of corporate power embodied in newly crowd-sourced alternative mappings.</p> <p><b>Colour Plate Six: Cartographies of Protest (On the inside back cover)</b></p> <p>Index 471</p>
<p>“The Map Reader feels like a rich investigation and compilation, adding to the literature of this relatively overlooked visual culture and bringing together in one place a valuable scholarly documentation and discussion of this important visual medium, along with some suggestion of the enormous potential for where it’s going.”  (<i>Landscape Ecology</i>, 1 March 2013)</p> <p>"It is compulsory reading for ‘students, academics and lay readers interested in understanding the appeal and power of maps’. It deserves a wide reading audience."  (<i>Int. J. Environment and Pollution</i>, 1 October 2013)</p> <p>"But for anyone who wants to get the most out of a map, whatever medium it is in, it is fascinating. It is a text-book for map readers, written by map-makers". (Law Society Journal, 1 October 2011)</p> <p>"I highly recommend the landmark anthology The Map Reader: Theories of Mapping Practice and Cartographic Representation edited by Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin, and Chris Perkins, to any students, researchers, and interested non-professionals in the areas of cartography, mapping technology, GIScience, social sciences, the media, the visual arts, and industry who are seeking a complete resource on the topic of map making. The articles cover every aspect of this rapidly changing field, written by leading scholars in many very diverse disciplines." (Blog Business World, 2 October 2011)</p> <p>"Written as a comprehensive guide to cover all of these disciplines The Map Reader ensures that the most important cartographic ideas are made available to researchers, students and cartography enthusiast alike." (PhysOrg.com, 25 May 2011)</p>
<b>Martin Dodge</b> and <b>Chris Perkins</b>, Senior Lecturers in Human Geography in the School of Environment and Development, the University of Manchester; and <b>Rob Kitchin</b>, Professor of Geography, National University of Ireland, Maynooth.
<i>The Map Reader</i> brings together, for the first time, classic and hard-to-find articles on mapping. Providing 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-five theoretical and thought provoking texts demonstrates how cartography works as a powerful representational form and explores how different mapping practices have been conceptualized in particular scholarly contexts. <p>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.</p> <p><i>The Map Reader</i> provides a new unique single source reference to the essential literature in the cartographic field:</p> <ul> <li> <div>More than fifty specially edited excerpts from key, classic articles and monographs</div> </li> <li> <div>Critical introductions by experienced experts in the field</div> </li> <li> <div>Focused coverage of key mapping practices, techniques and ideas</div> </li> <li> <div>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</div> </li> <li> <div>Full page colour illustrations of significant maps as provocative visual ‘think-pieces’</div> </li> <li> <div>Fully indexed, clearly structured and accessible ways into a fast changing field of cartographic research</div> </li> </ul>

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