ABSTRACT

This book provides an essential insight into the practices and ideas of maps and map-making. It draws on a wide range of social theorists, and theorists of maps and cartography, to show how maps and map-making have shaped the spaces in which we live.
Going beyond the focus of traditional cartography, the book draws on examples of the use of maps from the sixteenth century to the present, including their role in projects of the national and colonial state, emergent capitalism and the planetary consciousness of the natural sciences. It also considers the use of maps for military purposes, maps that have coded modern conceptions of health, disease and social character, and maps of the transparent human body and the transparent earth.

part I|23 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|21 pages

Maps and worlds

part II|47 pages

Deconstructing the map

chapter 2|33 pages

What do maps represent?

The crisis of representation and the critique of cartographic reason

chapter 3|12 pages

Situated pragmatics

Maps and mapping as social practice

part III|70 pages

The over-coded world

chapter 5|14 pages

Cadastres and capitalisms

The emergence of a new map consciousness

chapter 6|17 pages

Mapping the geo-body

State, territory and nation

chapter 7|19 pages

Commodity and control

Technologies of the social body

part IV|33 pages

Investing bodies in depth

part V|18 pages

Conclusion

chapter 9|16 pages

Counter-mappings

Cartographic reason in the age of intelligent machines and smart bombs