Routledge Handbook of Cartographic Humanities

Routledge Handbook of Cartographic Humanities

Lo Presti, Laura; Rossetto, Tania

Taylor & Francis Ltd

06/2024

420

Dura

9781032355931

15 a 20 dias

List of figures

List of tables

List of contributors

Introduction: Why Cartographic Humanities?

Tania Rossetto and Laura Lo Presti

Part 1: Preludes and trends

Chapter 1

Mapping Inner Worlds: Cartography as a Humanity

Veronica Della Dora

Chapter 2

Chorography, Cartography and the Geospatial Humanities

Javier Arce-Nazario, Janet Downie, Tim Shea, John Pickles, Toni Veneri

Chapter 3

Processual Map History

Matthew Edney

Chapter 4

Spatial Anthropology and Deep Mapping

Les Roberts

Chapter 5

Don't Believe the Mapping Hype! Three Steps Back for an Engaged Cartography

Paul Schweizer, Severin Halder (kollektiv orangotango)

Chapter 6

Posthuman Cartographies

Joe Gerlach

Part 2: Textural connections

Chapter 7

In brevi tabella. Thinking with Diagrams in Late Antiquity

Salvatore Liccardo

Chapter 8

Archaeology, Crafting Maps and Political Change

Piraye Haciguezeller

Chapter 9

Charting Movement through Historical Sources

Tiago Luis Gil

Chapter 10

Zoocentric Texts and Cartographic Contradictions

Sally Bushell

Chapter 11

Writing with Maps

Julien Negre

Chapter 12

A Plea for Slow Mapping

Joern Seemann

Part 3: Mediations and intermedialities

Chapter 13

A Media-theory of (Western) Cartographic Imagination

Tommaso Morawski

Chapter 14

The Map in Cinema and Cinema on the Map

Giorgio Avezzu

Chapter 15

The Antithetical Cartographies of Geospatial Cinema

Chris Lukinbeal

Chapter 16

Firing up Map Thinking: Music Videos Meta-maps

Tania Rossetto

Chapter 17

Worlds for Sale: Cartography in Print Advertisements

Davide Papotti

Chapter 18

Maps as Design Tools: Space, Time and Experience

Roger Paez Blanch, Manuela Valtchanova, Ferran Larroya, Josep Perello

Part 4: Cultural digitalities

Chapter 19

Digital Narcissism and GPS Selfies: The Entry of the Self

Claire Reddleman

Chapter 20

Automated Mapping Cultures

Sam Hind

Chapter 21

Map Fetishism and the Power of Maps: A Feminist-technoscience Perspective

Valentina Carraro

Chapter 22

Ethnography and Maps in the Digital Age

Mike Duggan

Chapter 23

A Humanistic Rewire of GIScience

Bo Zhao

Chapter 24

The Cine-Tourist's Online Cartographic Curiosity Cabinet

Tadas Bugnevicius

Part 5: Troubles and disruptions

Chapter 25

Emptying and filling. Maps of inland Africa

Andrea Pase

Chapter 26

Cartography Contra Colonialism

Clancy Wilmott

Chapter 27

Indigenous Cartographies

Davi Pereira Junior, Bjorn Sletto

Chapter 28

Black Cartography as Memory Work

Stephen P. Hanna

Chapter 29

Gender and Mapping Culture

Christina Dando

Chapter 30

Mapping as a Mode of Governance in the Anthropocene

David Chandler

Part 6: Elicitations and co-creations

Chapter 31

Co-Creative Mapping of Memories

Elise Olmedo, Emmanuelle Kayiganwa, Sebastien Caquard

Chapter 32

Mapping as the Art of Listening to Jewish Mediterranean Migrations

Piera Rossetto

Chapter 33

Drawing (on) Cartographic Intimacies

Laura Lo Presti

Chapter 34

Auto-cartography. (Fictional) Ethnographies of the Self and the Map in the Field

Giada Peterle

Chapter 35

Re-situating Participatory Cultural Mapping as Community-centred Work

Nancy Duxbury, W.F. Garrett-Petts

Chapter 36

Mapping Narratives on Historical Tours

Stephen P. Hanna, Amy E. Potter, Derek H. Alderman

Part 7: Public cartographic humanities

Chapter 37

The Social Life of Maps

Martin Brueckner

Chapter 38

Public Map Exhibitions: What Goes in and What Comes out

Tom Harper

Chapter 39

Participatory Network Mapping for Public Action

Barbara Brayshay, Aldo de Moor

Chapter 40

The Public Outreach of the ICA Commission on Art & Cartography

Taien Ng-Chan

Chapter 41

The (Aesth)Ethics of Publishing Geopolitical Maps

Laura Lo Presti, Tania Rossetto

Chapter 42

MapLab: A Bloomberg Newsletter Connecting Maps and the News

Laura Bliss, Marie Patino

Index
Cartographic Humanities;map studies;phenomenologies of mapping;ecologies of mapping;Fictional cartographies;non-fictional cartographies;cartographic mediality;Cultural Digitalities;Public Cartographic Humanities