Mapping as Process
  • About Me Brief CV
  • Cartography in the European Enlightenment Cartography: The Ideal and Its History Cartography (reviews) Harley's Cartographic Theories Mapping an Empire
  • Classified (with download links) Regular Format
  • Archive
  • Contributions dramatis personae
  • Contact

Mapping as Process

  • About/
    • About Me
    • Brief CV
  • My Books/
    • Cartography in the European Enlightenment
    • Cartography: The Ideal and Its History
    • Cartography (reviews)
    • Harley's Cartographic Theories
    • Mapping an Empire
  • Bibliographies/
    • Classified (with download links)
    • Regular Format
  • Archive/
  • Resources/
    • Contributions
    • dramatis personae
  • Contact/

Mapping as Process

A blog on the study of mapping processes: production, circulation, and consumption

Mapping as Process

Mapping as Process

  • About/
    • About Me
    • Brief CV
  • My Books/
    • Cartography in the European Enlightenment
    • Cartography: The Ideal and Its History
    • Cartography (reviews)
    • Harley's Cartographic Theories
    • Mapping an Empire
  • Bibliographies/
    • Classified (with download links)
    • Regular Format
  • Archive/
  • Resources/
    • Contributions
    • dramatis personae
  • Contact/
December 16, 2024

Another flat earth thingy ...

December 16, 2024/ Matthew Edney
Another flat earth thingy ...

FEers do an experiment …

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December 16, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
November 11, 2024

Alexander Dalrymple’s Spiteful Innovation in Map History

November 11, 2024/ Matthew Edney
Alexander Dalrymple’s Spiteful Innovation in Map History

Interpreting the great continent of “Jave le grande” to deride James Cook.

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November 11, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
November 03, 2024

The First Unorthodox, Modernist Mapping of the World?

November 03, 2024/ Matthew Edney
The First Unorthodox, Modernist Mapping of the World?

Before Buckminster Fuller and Bernard Cahill and their angular, fragmented world maps, there was Richard A. Proctor and his Star Atlas (1870), New Star Atlas (1874), and Student’s Atlas (1889)

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November 03, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
October 09, 2024

Size Matters: Why Do We Measure the Size of Maps, and How?

October 09, 2024/ Matthew Edney
Size Matters: Why Do We Measure the Size of Maps, and How?

These are not as straightforward questions as they might seem (and certainly as I had always been led to believe!)

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October 09, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
September 24, 2024

New Essay

September 24, 2024/ Matthew Edney
New Essay

on the practices (plural!) of studying early maps before 1800 and before the emergence of any systematic field of "map history"

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September 24, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
July 21, 2024

The Uselessness of Coronelli’s Great Globes of 1681–83

July 21, 2024/ Matthew Edney
The Uselessness of Coronelli’s Great Globes of 1681–83

Reflections on shifting contemporary and historiographic attitudes towards these oversized globes

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July 21, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
July 08, 2024

Some Parallels between Puppetry and the Nature of Mapping and Map Studies

July 08, 2024/ Matthew Edney
Some Parallels between Puppetry and the Nature of Mapping and Map Studies

Some thoughts stemming from viewing the Musée des arts de la marionette in Lyon.

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July 08, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
June 13, 2024

A confusion of “natural” expressions of map scale

June 13, 2024/ Matthew Edney
A confusion of “natural” expressions of map scale

A bit more on why British engineers would adopt the numerical ratio (1:x) of “map scale” later in the nineteenth century

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June 13, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
March 12, 2024

Who were the map historians?

March 12, 2024/ Matthew Edney
Who were the map historians?

A new page on this web site for biographical details of the people I’ve been writing about as map historians and map scholars.

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March 12, 2024/ Matthew Edney/
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  • About/
    • About Me
    • Brief CV
  • My Books/
    • Cartography in the European Enlightenment
    • Cartography: The Ideal and Its History
    • Cartography (reviews)
    • Harley's Cartographic Theories
    • Mapping an Empire
  • Bibliographies/
    • Classified (with download links)
    • Regular Format
  • Archive/
  • Resources/
    • Contributions
    • dramatis personae
  • Contact/

Mapping as Process

Mapping 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.

Search Mapping as Process:

The books …

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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).

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Available from the University of Chicago Press in paperback ($30), e-book ($10–30), or cloth ($90).

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Some paperback ($38) copies are still available, as well as the ebook, from the University of Chicago Press.

For notifications of new content:
a) add Mapping as Process to your favorite RSS application (I use reeder);
b) follow me on Mastodon: @mhedney@historians.social; or
c) subscribe to h-maps for occasional updates.

All images are used in accordance with academic “fair use” copyright provisions.
All text (c) Matthew H. Edney and is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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