Another small essay
/… about John Cullum’s wonderful map of Portland, Maine, from 1836
Read MoreA blog on the study of mapping processes: production, circulation, and consumption
… about John Cullum’s wonderful map of Portland, Maine, from 1836
Read MoreSo pleased and honored to have been asked to write the foreword for Susan Schulten’s incredible new book in R J Andrews’ series, Information Graphic Visionaries
Read MoreAnd not just PowerPoint: Google Slides, Apple’s Keynote, Open/LibreOffice’s Impress, etc. are all great tools for showing images of maps in presentations, as long as some basic rules are followed!
Read MoreOn the origins of “cartobibliography” (a word I want to discard) in the work of Johannes Tiberius Bodel Nijenhuis in the 1830s and 1840s
Read MoreAn eighteenth-century German post-road map which really surprised me last week, because of the manner in which its 16 plates were printed.
Read MoreOn the use and production of copies for map historical research, both manuscript and printed.
Read More…. that seems not to want to even hint at religious causes for flat-earth beliefs.
Read MoreHow map history has been (barely) supported by the IGU
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.
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.
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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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