Arno Peters and his Map Work
/I’ve been trying to figure it out … what is the significance today of all that sturm und drang?
Read MoreA blog on the study of mapping processes: production, circulation, and consumption
I’ve been trying to figure it out … what is the significance today of all that sturm und drang?
Read MoreThe annual round up of new books in map history, as I’ve noticed/seen/found.
Read MoreBrief videos of my new exhibition at OML, in lieu of a web-version or printed catalog (both coming eventually). The show itself will hang through 29 June 2024.
Read MoreBernard Sleigh’s wonderful 1917 panorama and the British fad for all things fairy
Read More(I can’t believe I failed to blog this before now!)
Read Moreon the first facsimile collections of early maps produced in Paris in the 1830s, 1840s, and 1850s, and their role in the formation of globalist and settler-colonial map history.
Read MorePeter Benes’s incredibly wide-ranging map exhibition of 1980 marks the shifting nature of “the history of cartography” (and of folklore studies), establishing a pattern followed by several later exhibitions dedicated to the unity of cartography, even as the diverse array of materials in the exhibition put the lie to that unity.
Read MoreLet’s revisit Boggs and Lewis’s 1945 guide that is REALLY USEFUL but that everyone seems to have forgotten about! With a challenge to modern lovers of map projections!!!
Read MoreMapping as Process is a space for me to explore a new approach to understanding mapping and its history. The exploration will eventually contribute to a book of the same name.
Comparative Map History and “the History of Cartography”: Methodologies, Institutions, and Idealizations in Brill Research Perspectives on Map History. Available from Brill in print and as an ebook ($87).
Cartography in the European Enlightenment, Volume Four of The History of Cartography, edited by myself and Mary Pedley. Available from the University of Chicago Press, in print and ebook ($500).
Available from the University of Chicago Press in paperback ($30), e-book ($10–30), or cloth ($90).
Available from my bibliography
Some paperback ($38) copies are still available, as well as the ebook, from the University of Chicago Press.
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