fbpx
Wikipedia

Critical cartography

Critical cartography is a set of mapping practices and methods of analysis grounded in critical theory, specifically the thesis that maps reflect and perpetuate relations of power, typically in favor of a society's dominant group.[1] Critical cartographers aim to reveal the “‘hidden agendas of cartography’ as tools of socio-spatial power”.[2] While the term "critical cartography" often refers to a body of theoretical literature, critical cartographers also call for practical applications of critical cartographic theory, such as counter-mapping, participatory mapping, and neogeography.

History edit

Critical cartography originated in the 1960s through the works of Brian Harley and others, then was more formally developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[3][4][5][6] Critical Cartography opposes the traditional conceptualization of mapping as an objective and neutral reflection of the environment, and instead argues that maps have historically been produced to reflect and support the interests of the ruling classes.[7] Non-academic critical mapping organizations such as Counter-Cartographies Collective (USA), Iconoclasistas (Argentina), and Bureau d’Etudes (France) have also emerged[8][9][10]

Critical cartographers edit

Since the 1991 death of John Brian Harley, formerly a professor in Geography at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, a number of scholars have published theories and writing that identify maps as social issues and expressions of power and knowledge. Leading figures include Denis Cosgrove, Denis Wood, Jeremy Crampton, John Krygier, and Kevin St. Martin.

John Brian Harley edit

"Maps are never value-free images" – John Brian Harley

John Brian Harley (1932–1991) was a geographer, cartographer, and map historian. He lectured at the universities of Birmingham, Liverpool, Exeter, and Wisconsin Milwaukee. Some of his works include Christopher Greenwood, County Map-Maker (1962), Maps for the local historian (1972), Ordnance Survey Maps: a Descriptive Manual (1975), Concepts in the History of Cartography (1980), and The New Nature of Maps (2001) which was a combination of his essays and was published after his death[citation needed] His work for critical cartography included incorporating ideas of power, ideology, and surveillance into the understanding of mapping. He considered maps to be social documents that need to be understood in their historical contexts which include the situations in which they were made and used.[3][7] 'While they can be interpreted at face value, maps also possess symbolism that can communicate political power.[7] Harleys idea of the social construction of maps was cemented by the thoughts that maps are in fact transient rather than permanent; they have the ability to change over time in accordance with the society lived in. Cartography allows for power to be inscribed on the land.[7] Harley discouraged people from believing maps to be “above the politics of knowledge”.[4]

Denis Cosgrove edit

Denis Cosgrove (1948–2008) was a professor of geography at UCLA who was concerned with the role of spatial images and representation in the making and communicating of knowledge. He was also interested in the physical world and the limits it placed on human progress.[11] He differentiated between dominant and alternative cultures, noting that the dominant culture's control of the cartographic representation of a given region.

Jeremy Crampton edit

Since 2018, Jeremy Crampton is a professor of Urban Data Analysis at the University of Newcastle School of Architecture, Planning & Landscape. He previously held professorships at the University of Kentucky, University of Georgia, and George Mason University. He attended the 1993 gathering at Friday Harbor and has written several literature reviews of cartography, critical GIS and social theory. He has also made several contributions to scholarship on Michel Foucault in Geography.[12]

Topics and themes in critical cartography edit

Cartographic censorship edit

There are two primary types of cartographic censorship. One is the censorship of information in order to serve defense interests, and the other is to enforce social and political values.[13] Censorship in the interest of defense may include the omission or obfuscation of military bases or infrastructure, as well as locations that may be vulnerable to attack such as oil pipelines or power substations. Censorship as a way to enforce values is highlighted in the section of this page labeled “Colonialism”.

Colonialism edit

"Maps anticipated empire." – John Brian Harley

In his chapter Maps, Knowledge, Power, Harley states that maps “were used in colonial promotion” because the maps claimed lands in the name of the settlers “before they were effectively occupied”.[7] Many explorers of the Americas, including Christopher Columbus, created maps of the continent that defined the political, economic, and cultural beginnings of colonial North America.[14][7] These maps were inscribed locations in the Americas with Western Christian names. Critical cartographers argue that these names helped establish the territory as being compatible with Western systems of governance and therefore could be conquered and controlled.[4] For example, English colonists took possession of an area Powhatan Indians called Tsenacomoco and established an English colony named ‘Virginia’. They exploited the indigenous community to create the maps that helped them establish colonies.[14] Later in the Middle East, British colonial authorities in Palestine enforced a property mapping regime to replace local practices that negotiated borders and land use, shifting power from peasants to colonial institutions.[further explanation needed][15]

Critical cartographers point to the rising popularity of digital mapping systems (such as Google Maps, Apple Maps, and Microsoft Bing Maps) as highlighting the role of cartography in representing occupied territories.[16] While parts of the occupied territories are labeled on the maps (for example, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip), the name of country associated with these territories is not always labeled on the map.

Counter-mapping edit

Counter-mapping mostly refers to maps made by indigenous cartographers but can include maps from other sources as well. Counter-mappers work in reaction to what they describe as encroachment by colonial influences.[17] Counter-maps have been used to press indigenous claims for rights over land.[18]

Many critical cartographers have engaged in counter-mapping to rewrite the narrative of the history of Israel's expansion into territories contested with Palestine. One example is the Counter Cartographies Collective’s map of how much of the land belonged to which country since 1948. Another example is how Palestinian refugees themselves used Google Earth to map the original Palestinian villages Israel destroyed in the aftermath of its independence in 1948.[16] These maps are attempts at showing a Palestinian perspective on the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Kibera, Kenya edit

In 2008, a team of cartographers worked with the residents of Kibera, Kenya to map the city. Since then, a trained team of locals have gathered census data of over 15,000 people and mapped 5000 structures, services (public toilets, schools), and infrastructures (drainage system, water and electricity supply) in the village of Kianda, one of the 13 villages in Kibera. From the data gathered in Kianda, the Map Kibera Project team estimated that Kibera could be inhabited by a total population ranging from 235,000 to a maximum of 270,000 people.[19] In 2011, Penn State produced a documentary about the story of mapping Kibera.[20] The mapping of Kibera is an example of counter-mapping, as the indigenous people of Kibera participated in the mapping of their own land rather than have their land mapped from strictly outside sources. Before the residents mapped their city, the city's area was a blank space on Google Maps noted with only the label of “Kibera”, but now includes significantly more detail.[20]

Mercator projection edit

 
Colton's Map of the World on Mercator's Projection (1858

In 1569, Gerardus Mercator introduced a map projection of the Earth which is now known as the Mercator projection, with the purpose of preserving compass bearings at the cost of distorting other aspects of size and shape. This projection maintained equally spaced longitudinal lines but spaced out the latitudinal lines. These lines were spaced farther apart as their distance from the Equator increased. The purpose of this change in spacing is to assure that if one measures how many degrees east of north a certain direction is, it will always appear on the map as just that many degrees clockwise from a line that points upward, regardless of where it is on the map.

However, this has the effect that areas farther away from the Equator seam to be disproportionately large.[21] Greenland, for example, appears to be larger than the continent of Africa. In reality, Africa's area is 14 times greater than that of Greenland. Many cartographers argued that, because size is often associated with power and/or importance, Europe being represented as disproportionately large relative to places like Africa and Oceania perpetuates notions of Eurocentrism.[22][23] Web mapping applications use a version of the Mercator projection known as the Web Mercator.

Other mapping projections include the Peters and Robinson projection. The Peters projection attempts to preserve area but distorts the shapes of landmasses.[24] The Robinsons projections tries to reduce the amount of distortion overall and can be seen as a compromise between the other two.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Firth, Rhiannon (15 April 2015). "Critical Cartography". The Occupied Times of London. No. 27. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  2. ^ Harley, J. B. (1992). "Deconstructing the map". Passages. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  3. ^ a b Crampton, Jeremy W.; Krygier, John (2005). "An Introduction to Critical Cartography". ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies. 4 (1): 11–33. ISSN 1492-9732.
  4. ^ a b c Crampton, Jeremy W (2010). Mapping: A Critical Introduction to Cartography and GIS. United Kingdom: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-2172-9.
  5. ^ Wilson, Matthew W (2017). New Lines: Critical GIS and the Trouble of the Map. United States: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0816698530.
  6. ^ "Critical Cartography | Making Maps: DIY Cartography". makingmaps.net. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Paul., Laxton (2001). The new nature of maps : essays in the history of cartography. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801870903. OCLC 45024500.
  8. ^ "(no title)". www.countercartographies.org. Retrieved 2017-06-09. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  9. ^ "Iconoclasistas - Mapeo colectivo y herramientas de código abierto". Iconoclasistas (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  10. ^ "Bureau d'études". Bureau d'Etudes. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  11. ^ "Denis Cosgrove". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  12. ^ Professor Jeremy Crampton 2020-10-29 at the Wayback Machine ncl.ac.uk
  13. ^ "How to Lie with Maps". iRevolutions. 2009-06-16. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  14. ^ a b "Maps and the Beginnings of Colonial North America: Digital Collections for the Classroom". dcc.newberry.org. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  15. ^ Quiquivix, Linda (2013). "When the Carob Tree Was the Border: On Autonomy and Palestinian Practices of Figuring it Out". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 24 (3): 170–189. doi:10.1080/10455752.2013.815242. ISSN 1045-5752. S2CID 143408982.
  16. ^ a b Quiquivix, Linda (2014-04-29). "Art of War, Art of Resistance: Palestinian Counter-Cartography on Google Earth". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 104 (3): 444–459. doi:10.1080/00045608.2014.892328. ISSN 0004-5608. S2CID 143748228.
  17. ^ Rundstrom, R. (2009). Kitchin, Rob; Thrift, Nigel (eds.). International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Oxford: Elsevier. pp. 314–318. ISBN 9780080449104.
  18. ^ "The New Nature of Maps". jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  19. ^ "Map Kibera Project". mapkiberaproject.yolasite.com. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  20. ^ a b wpsu (2011-05-02), Geospatial Revolution / Episode Four, Chapter Four: Mapping Power to the People, archived from the original on 2021-12-12, retrieved 2017-06-15
  21. ^ "Mercator projection | cartography". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  22. ^ Battersby, Sarah E. (2014). "Implications of Web Mercator and its Use in Online Mapping". Cartographica. 49 (2): 85–101. doi:10.3138/carto.49.2.2313. S2CID 6403891 – via USGS.
  23. ^ . The Concordian. Archived from the original on 2017-10-23. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  24. ^ Barney, Timothy (2014). "The Peters Projection and the Latitude and Longitude of Recolonization". Journal of International and Intercultural Communication. 7: 103–126.
  • Pickles, John. 2004. A History of Spaces. Routledge.
  • Wood, Denis. 1992. The Power of Maps, New York/London, The Guilford Press.

critical, cartography, mapping, practices, methods, analysis, grounded, critical, theory, specifically, thesis, that, maps, reflect, perpetuate, relations, power, typically, favor, society, dominant, group, critical, cartographers, reveal, hidden, agendas, car. Critical cartography is a set of mapping practices and methods of analysis grounded in critical theory specifically the thesis that maps reflect and perpetuate relations of power typically in favor of a society s dominant group 1 Critical cartographers aim to reveal the hidden agendas of cartography as tools of socio spatial power 2 While the term critical cartography often refers to a body of theoretical literature critical cartographers also call for practical applications of critical cartographic theory such as counter mapping participatory mapping and neogeography Contents 1 History 2 Critical cartographers 2 1 John Brian Harley 2 2 Denis Cosgrove 2 3 Jeremy Crampton 3 Topics and themes in critical cartography 3 1 Cartographic censorship 3 2 Colonialism 3 3 Counter mapping 3 3 1 Kibera Kenya 3 4 Mercator projection 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory editCritical cartography originated in the 1960s through the works of Brian Harley and others then was more formally developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s 3 4 5 6 Critical Cartography opposes the traditional conceptualization of mapping as an objective and neutral reflection of the environment and instead argues that maps have historically been produced to reflect and support the interests of the ruling classes 7 Non academic critical mapping organizations such as Counter Cartographies Collective USA Iconoclasistas Argentina and Bureau d Etudes France have also emerged 8 9 10 Critical cartographers editSince the 1991 death of John Brian Harley formerly a professor in Geography at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee a number of scholars have published theories and writing that identify maps as social issues and expressions of power and knowledge Leading figures include Denis Cosgrove Denis Wood Jeremy Crampton John Krygier and Kevin St Martin John Brian Harley edit Maps are never value free images John Brian HarleyJohn Brian Harley 1932 1991 was a geographer cartographer and map historian He lectured at the universities of Birmingham Liverpool Exeter and Wisconsin Milwaukee Some of his works include Christopher Greenwood County Map Maker 1962 Maps for the local historian 1972 Ordnance Survey Maps a Descriptive Manual 1975 Concepts in the History of Cartography 1980 and The New Nature of Maps 2001 which was a combination of his essays and was published after his death citation needed His work for critical cartography included incorporating ideas of power ideology and surveillance into the understanding of mapping He considered maps to be social documents that need to be understood in their historical contexts which include the situations in which they were made and used 3 7 While they can be interpreted at face value maps also possess symbolism that can communicate political power 7 Harleys idea of the social construction of maps was cemented by the thoughts that maps are in fact transient rather than permanent they have the ability to change over time in accordance with the society lived in Cartography allows for power to be inscribed on the land 7 Harley discouraged people from believing maps to be above the politics of knowledge 4 Denis Cosgrove edit Denis Cosgrove 1948 2008 was a professor of geography at UCLA who was concerned with the role of spatial images and representation in the making and communicating of knowledge He was also interested in the physical world and the limits it placed on human progress 11 He differentiated between dominant and alternative cultures noting that the dominant culture s control of the cartographic representation of a given region Jeremy Crampton edit Since 2018 Jeremy Crampton is a professor of Urban Data Analysis at the University of Newcastle School of Architecture Planning amp Landscape He previously held professorships at the University of Kentucky University of Georgia and George Mason University He attended the 1993 gathering at Friday Harbor and has written several literature reviews of cartography critical GIS and social theory He has also made several contributions to scholarship on Michel Foucault in Geography 12 Topics and themes in critical cartography editCartographic censorship edit There are two primary types of cartographic censorship One is the censorship of information in order to serve defense interests and the other is to enforce social and political values 13 Censorship in the interest of defense may include the omission or obfuscation of military bases or infrastructure as well as locations that may be vulnerable to attack such as oil pipelines or power substations Censorship as a way to enforce values is highlighted in the section of this page labeled Colonialism Colonialism edit Maps anticipated empire John Brian HarleyIn his chapter Maps Knowledge Power Harley states that maps were used in colonial promotion because the maps claimed lands in the name of the settlers before they were effectively occupied 7 Many explorers of the Americas including Christopher Columbus created maps of the continent that defined the political economic and cultural beginnings of colonial North America 14 7 These maps were inscribed locations in the Americas with Western Christian names Critical cartographers argue that these names helped establish the territory as being compatible with Western systems of governance and therefore could be conquered and controlled 4 For example English colonists took possession of an area Powhatan Indians called Tsenacomoco and established an English colony named Virginia They exploited the indigenous community to create the maps that helped them establish colonies 14 Later in the Middle East British colonial authorities in Palestine enforced a property mapping regime to replace local practices that negotiated borders and land use shifting power from peasants to colonial institutions further explanation needed 15 Critical cartographers point to the rising popularity of digital mapping systems such as Google Maps Apple Maps and Microsoft Bing Maps as highlighting the role of cartography in representing occupied territories 16 While parts of the occupied territories are labeled on the maps for example the West Bank and the Gaza Strip the name of country associated with these territories is not always labeled on the map Counter mapping edit Counter mapping mostly refers to maps made by indigenous cartographers but can include maps from other sources as well Counter mappers work in reaction to what they describe as encroachment by colonial influences 17 Counter maps have been used to press indigenous claims for rights over land 18 Many critical cartographers have engaged in counter mapping to rewrite the narrative of the history of Israel s expansion into territories contested with Palestine One example is the Counter Cartographies Collective s map of how much of the land belonged to which country since 1948 Another example is how Palestinian refugees themselves used Google Earth to map the original Palestinian villages Israel destroyed in the aftermath of its independence in 1948 16 These maps are attempts at showing a Palestinian perspective on the Israel Palestine conflict Kibera Kenya edit In 2008 a team of cartographers worked with the residents of Kibera Kenya to map the city Since then a trained team of locals have gathered census data of over 15 000 people and mapped 5000 structures services public toilets schools and infrastructures drainage system water and electricity supply in the village of Kianda one of the 13 villages in Kibera From the data gathered in Kianda the Map Kibera Project team estimated that Kibera could be inhabited by a total population ranging from 235 000 to a maximum of 270 000 people 19 In 2011 Penn State produced a documentary about the story of mapping Kibera 20 The mapping of Kibera is an example of counter mapping as the indigenous people of Kibera participated in the mapping of their own land rather than have their land mapped from strictly outside sources Before the residents mapped their city the city s area was a blank space on Google Maps noted with only the label of Kibera but now includes significantly more detail 20 Mercator projection edit nbsp Colton s Map of the World on Mercator s Projection 1858 In 1569 Gerardus Mercator introduced a map projection of the Earth which is now known as the Mercator projection with the purpose of preserving compass bearings at the cost of distorting other aspects of size and shape This projection maintained equally spaced longitudinal lines but spaced out the latitudinal lines These lines were spaced farther apart as their distance from the Equator increased The purpose of this change in spacing is to assure that if one measures how many degrees east of north a certain direction is it will always appear on the map as just that many degrees clockwise from a line that points upward regardless of where it is on the map However this has the effect that areas farther away from the Equator seam to be disproportionately large 21 Greenland for example appears to be larger than the continent of Africa In reality Africa s area is 14 times greater than that of Greenland Many cartographers argued that because size is often associated with power and or importance Europe being represented as disproportionately large relative to places like Africa and Oceania perpetuates notions of Eurocentrism 22 23 Web mapping applications use a version of the Mercator projection known as the Web Mercator Other mapping projections include the Peters and Robinson projection The Peters projection attempts to preserve area but distorts the shapes of landmasses 24 The Robinsons projections tries to reduce the amount of distortion overall and can be seen as a compromise between the other two See also editCartographic censorship Collaborative mapping Counter mapping Neogeography Participatory 3D modelling Participatory GIS Public participation geographic information system Spatial citizenship Traditional knowledge GIS Volunteered geographic informationReferences edit Firth Rhiannon 15 April 2015 Critical Cartography The Occupied Times of London No 27 Retrieved 16 February 2018 Harley J B 1992 Deconstructing the map Passages Retrieved 2017 06 15 a b Crampton Jeremy W Krygier John 2005 An Introduction to Critical Cartography ACME An International Journal for Critical Geographies 4 1 11 33 ISSN 1492 9732 a b c Crampton Jeremy W 2010 Mapping A Critical Introduction to Cartography and GIS United Kingdom Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 2172 9 Wilson Matthew W 2017 New Lines Critical GIS and the Trouble of the Map United States University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0816698530 Critical Cartography Making Maps DIY Cartography makingmaps net Retrieved 2017 06 09 a b c d e f Paul Laxton 2001 The new nature of maps essays in the history of cartography Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801870903 OCLC 45024500 no title www countercartographies org Retrieved 2017 06 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help Iconoclasistas Mapeo colectivo y herramientas de codigo abierto Iconoclasistas in European Spanish Retrieved 2017 06 09 Bureau d etudes Bureau d Etudes Retrieved 2017 06 09 Denis Cosgrove Telegraph co uk Retrieved 2017 06 09 Professor Jeremy Crampton Archived 2020 10 29 at the Wayback Machine ncl ac uk How to Lie with Maps iRevolutions 2009 06 16 Retrieved 2017 06 15 a b Maps and the Beginnings of Colonial North America Digital Collections for the Classroom dcc newberry org Retrieved 2017 06 09 Quiquivix Linda 2013 When the Carob Tree Was the Border On Autonomy and Palestinian Practices of Figuring it Out Capitalism Nature Socialism 24 3 170 189 doi 10 1080 10455752 2013 815242 ISSN 1045 5752 S2CID 143408982 a b Quiquivix Linda 2014 04 29 Art of War Art of Resistance Palestinian Counter Cartography on Google Earth Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104 3 444 459 doi 10 1080 00045608 2014 892328 ISSN 0004 5608 S2CID 143748228 Rundstrom R 2009 Kitchin Rob Thrift Nigel eds International Encyclopedia of Human Geography Oxford Elsevier pp 314 318 ISBN 9780080449104 The New Nature of Maps jhupbooks press jhu edu Retrieved 2017 06 15 Map Kibera Project mapkiberaproject yolasite com Retrieved 2017 06 15 a b wpsu 2011 05 02 Geospatial Revolution Episode Four Chapter Four Mapping Power to the People archived from the original on 2021 12 12 retrieved 2017 06 15 Mercator projection cartography Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2017 06 09 Battersby Sarah E 2014 Implications of Web Mercator and its Use in Online Mapping Cartographica 49 2 85 101 doi 10 3138 carto 49 2 2313 S2CID 6403891 via USGS Are your maps racially biased The Concordian Archived from the original on 2017 10 23 Retrieved 2017 06 15 Barney Timothy 2014 The Peters Projection and the Latitude and Longitude of Recolonization Journal of International and Intercultural Communication 7 103 126 Crampton Jeremy W and John Krygier 2006 An Introduction to Critical Cartography Pickles John 2004 A History of Spaces Routledge Wood Denis 1992 The Power of Maps New York London The Guilford Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Critical cartography amp oldid 1192414718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.