After the map : cartography, navigation, and the transformation of territory in the twentieth century

Author(s)

    • Rankin, William

Bibliographic Information

After the map : cartography, navigation, and the transformation of territory in the twentieth century

William Rankin

University of Chicago Press, c2016

  • : cloth

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • Introduction: territory and the mapping sciences
  • The international map of the world and the logic of representation
  • The authority of representation
  • A single map for all countries, 1891-1939
  • Maps as tools
  • Globalism, regionalism, and the erosion of universal cartography, 1940-1965
  • Cartographic grids and new territories of calculation
  • Aiming guns, recording land, and stitching map to territory
  • The invention of cartographic grid systems, 1914-1939
  • Territoriality without borders
  • Global grids and the universal transverse Mercator, 1940-1965
  • Electronic navigation and territorial pointillism
  • Inhabiting the grid
  • Radionavigation and electronic coordinates, 1920-1965
  • The politics of global coverage
  • The Navy, NASA, and GPS, 1960-2010
  • Conclusion: the politics in my pocket

Description and Table of Contents

Description

For most of the twentieth century, maps were indispensable. They were how governments understood, managed, and defended their territory, and during the two world wars they were produced by the hundreds of millions. Cartographers and journalists predicted the dawning of a "map-minded age," where increasingly state-of-the-art maps would become everyday tools. By the century's end, however, there had been decisive shift in mapping practices, as the dominant methods of land surveying and print publication were increasingly displaced by electronic navigation systems. In After the Map, William Rankin argues that although this shift did not render traditional maps obsolete, it did radically change our experience of geographic knowledge, from the God's-eye view of the map to the embedded subjectivity of GPS. Likewise, older concerns with geographic truth and objectivity have been upstaged by a new emphasis on simplicity, reliability, and convenience. After the Map shows how this change in geographic perspective is ultimately a transformation of the nature of territory, both social and political.

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