Time for Mapping
Sybille Lammes (Redaktør) Chris Perkins (Redaktør) Alex Gekker (Redaktør) Sam Hind (Redaktør) Clancy Wilmott (Redaktør) Daniel Evans (Redaktør)
Maps take place in time as well as representing space. The Google map on your smartphone appears to fix the world, serving as a practical spatial tool, but in practice is deployed in ways that draw attention to memories, rhythm, synchronicity, sequence and duration.
Les merMaps take place in time as well as representing space. The Google map on your smartphone appears to fix the world, serving as a practical spatial tool, but in practice is deployed in ways that draw attention to memories, rhythm, synchronicity, sequence and duration. This interdisciplinary collection focuses on how these temporal aspects of mapping might be understood, at a time when mapping technologies have been profoundly changed by digital developments. It contrasts different aspects of this temporality, bringing together experts from critical cartography, media studies and science and technology studies. Together the chapters offer a unique interdisciplinary focus revealing the complex and social ways in which time in wrapped up with digital technologies and revealed in everyday mapping tasks: from navigating across cities, to serving as scientific groundings for news stories; from managing smart cities, to visual art practice. It brings time back into the map!
An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Manchester University Press
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 288
- ISBN
- 9781526122537
- Utgivelsesår
- 2018
- Format
- 23 x 16 cm
Om forfatteren
Sybille Lammes is Professor of New Media and Digital Culture at Leiden University
Chris Perkins is Reader in Geography at the University of Manchester
Alex Gekker is Lecturer in Media and Culture at the University of Amsterdam
Sam Hind is Research Associate in Locating Media at the University of Siegen
Clancy Wilmott is Lecturer in Geography at the University of Manchester
Daniel Evans is a PhD candidate in Human Geography at the University of Manchester