A Response to Denil's Accusations
/Mark Denil has been using me as a punching bag. I punch back. Here’s an image of weary people looking at a map (of the Chicago World’s Fair 1893)
Read MoreA blog on the study of mapping processes: production, circulation, and consumption
Mark Denil has been using me as a punching bag. I punch back. Here’s an image of weary people looking at a map (of the Chicago World’s Fair 1893)
Read MoreA translation of Arnold Heeren’s prospectus for a new field of study … map history!
Read MoreChallenging the received wisdom about the 1797 facsimile of a fifteenth-century mappamundi made from metal with enamel inlay proves not to be as easy as I had thought, and I hit the limits of the study of digital images. So, something of a cautionary tale.
Read MoreJerry Brotton and I talk about the 1662 world map by Joan Blaeu, commercial mapping in 17th century Amsterdam, the History of Cartography Project, women and mapping, and how I got interested in early maps!
Read MoreWhen maps of oceans are not actually charts (the converse of early maps of continents that are called charts!)
Read MoreTime for the annual list! (Image is open-source stock.)
Read MoreInterpreting the great continent of “Jave le grande” to deride James Cook.
Read MoreBefore 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)
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).
Some paperback ($38) copies are still available, as well as the ebook, from the University of Chicago Press.
No information is captured, collected, or stored about visitors to Mappingasprocess.net. Squarespace, as the site host, might collect basic data.
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.
Powered by Squarespace.