The self-made map : cartographic writing in early modern France

書誌事項

The self-made map : cartographic writing in early modern France

Tom Conley

University of Minnesota Press, 1997

  • pb

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9780816627004

内容説明

Illuminates the connection between literature, identity and mapmaking in 15th and 16th-century France. This work argues that during the Renaissance in France a "new cartograhic impulse" affected both the "graphic and imaginary forms of literature". The author demonstrates that as newmaps were plotted, a new sense of self emerged, one defined in part by the relationship of the self to space. Tracing the explosion of interest in mapmaking that occurred with the discovery of the New World, and discusses the commensurate rise of what he defines as cartographic wrting - writing that "holds, penetrates, delineates and explores space". Considering the works of such writers as Rabelais, Montaigne, and Descartes, the author provides a navigation through the printed page, revealing the emerging values of Renaissance France. In his examination of the placing of words, letters and graphic elements in books, he exposes the playful and sometimes enigmatic relation between spatial organization and text. He also exposes the ideological exercise inherent in mapmaking, arguing that Renaissance cartography is inseparably bound up with the politics of the era. The book combines studies of art, geography, history, literature, and printing to show a clear historical transformation, along the way linking geographical discoveries, printing processes and political awareness.

目次

  • Franco-Burgundian backgrounds - some figural relations with space
  • letter grid and nation, Geoffrey Tory
  • Oronce Fine - a well rounded signature
  • words a la carte - a Rabelaisian itinerary
  • an insular moment - from cosmography to ethnography
  • an atlas evolves - Maurice Bouguereau, "Le theatre Francoys (1954)
  • Montaigne - a political geography of the self
  • La Popeliniere and Descartes - signatures in perspective.
巻冊次

pb ISBN 9780816674480

内容説明

The Self-Made Map argues that during the Renaissance in France a "new cartographic impulse" affected both the "graphic and imaginary forms of literature." In this wide-ranging and fascinating work, Tom Conley demonstrates that as new maps were plotted during this period, a new sense of self emerged, one defined in part by the relationship of the self to space. Conley traces the explosion of interest in mapmaking that occurred with the discovery of the New World, and discusses the commensurate rise of what he defines as cartographic writing-writing that "holds, penetrates, delineates, and explores space." Considering the works of such writers as Rabelais, Montaigne, and Descartes, Conley provides a "navigation" through the printed page, revealing the emerging values of Renaissance France. In his examination of the placing of words, letters, and graphic elements in books, he exposes the playful and sometimes enigmatic relation between spatial organization and text. Conley also exposes the ideological exercise inherent in mapmaking, arguing that Renaissance cartography is inseparably bound up with the politics of the era. He undertakes close readings of maps and illustrations, discussing the necessity of viewing Renaissance maps in the context of their typographic layout, graphic reproduction, and literary and ideological import. Richly illustrated throughout, The Self-Made Map combines studies of art, geography, history, literature, and printing to show a clear historical transformation, along the way linking geographical discoveries, printing processes, and political awareness. Conley's provocative analysis discloses how early modern printed literature and cartography worked together to crystallize broader issues engaging the then emergent status of cultural identity, nation, and individuality.

目次

Contents List of Illustrations Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction Cartographic Writing-The Relation to the Unknown-The Perspectival Object-Pictograms-The Signature-Approaches 1. Franco-Burgundian Backgrounds Some Figural Relations with Space: A French Model: Jean Fouquet-Wit and Rivalry: The Portrait of Guillaume Juvenal des Oursins-A Nascent Grid of Narrative-A Poetic map: Jean Molinet 2. The Letter and the Grid: Geoffroy Tory Three Allegories-A Fourth Allegory: Architecture, Letter, and Nation- Betrayals of Diagram and Text-A Well-Joined Marquetry-A Cartography of the Letter 3. Oronce Fine: A Well-Rounded Signature A Craftsman's Adolescence-The Fine Animal: A Face and a Strategy (Voyage a la terre sainte)-From Signature to Self-Portrait-From Portrait to Self-Made Identity: The Protomathesis-The Heart of the World: The cordiform Maps-Gallia and the Topographical Map in Le sphere du monde-The Analogical Style 4. Words a la Carte: A Rabelaisian Map Beginnings-Tourism-The Itinerary: Notable Places-Encounters of the First Kind-Reprieve: Spaces to Listen-A City Named Parr rys-Words a la Carte-Rabelais and the "Cordiform" Text 5. An Insular Moment: From Cosmography to Ethnography A Topography of the Face-The Isolario and Cosmography-Andre Thevet's Staging of Alterity-Some Fortunes of La cosmographie universelle and Its Ethnography 6. An Atlas Evolves: Maurice Bouguereau, Le theater francoys The Idea of a National Atlas-Iconography: The Title Page and Opening Pages-Bouguereau's Maps-Maps and Texts Compared: Nicolai and Symeone-An Atlas of Rivers: Chorography, Potamography, and the Image of a Nation-The Signature: Bouguereau's Vanishing Point 7. Montaigne: A Political Geography of the Self A Book Engineered-The Book as a Cardinal Form-The Politics of "Des cannibals"-Fumee's Gomara and "Des coches" 8. La Poeliniere and Descartes: Signatures in Perspective The Map of Les trois mondes-The Cartesian Map-The Perspectival Signature: Between Center and Margin-A Saturation of Names 9. Conclusion Notes Works Cited Index

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