Home / Humanities / History / World History / Cartography: The Ideal and Its History

Cartography: The Ideal and Its History

AUTHOR
Price
€28.80
€32.00 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Over the past four decades, the volumes published in the landmark History of Cartography series have both chronicled and encouraged scholarship about maps and mapping practices across time and space. As the current director of the project that has produced these volumes, Matthew H. Edney has a unique vantage point for understanding what “cartography” has come to mean and include.

In this book Edney disavows the term cartography, rejecting the notion that maps represent an undifferentiated category of objects for study. Rather than treating maps as a single, unified group, he argues, scholars need to take a processual approach that examines specific types of maps—sea charts versus thematic maps, for example—in the context of the unique circumstances of their production, circulation, and consumption. To illuminate this bold argument, Edney chronicles precisely how the ideal of cartography that has developed in the West since 1800 has gone astray. By exposing the flaws in this ideal, his book challenges everyone who studies maps and mapping practices to reexamine their approach to the topic. The study of cartography will never be the same.

Author: Edney Matthew
Publisher: CHICAGO UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780226605685
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Acknowledgments

Conventions Used in This Book

1 Introducing the Ideal of Cartography

2 Seeing, and Seeing Past, the Ideal
Satire, Critique, and a Persistent Ideal
Breaking Free of the Ideal

3 Cartography’s Idealized Preconceptions
Ontology
Pictorialness
Individuality
Materiality
Observation
Efficacy
Discipline
Publicity
Morality
A Singular and Universal Endeavor

4 The Ideal of Cartography Emerges
Systematic Mapping
Mathematics and Rationality, Empires and States
Seeing the World
New Mapping Professions
Mass Mapping Literacy
Forging the Web

5 Map Scale and Cartography’s Idealized Geometry
Technical Points concerning the Numerical Ratio
The Geometries of Western Mapping
Projective Geometry, Numerical Ratios, and Map Scale
Numerical Ratios and Map Scale in the Twentieth Century
Map Resolution, Not Map Scale

6 Not Cartography, But Mapping

Bibliography

Index

Matthew H. Edney is Osher Professor in the History of Cartography at the University of Southern Maine. He is the author of Cartography: The Ideal and Its History and Mapping an Empire: The Geographical Construction of British India, 1765–1843, both also published by the University of Chicago Press.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist