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Mapping the World: How Cartography Shaped Empires and Ideas MTA
A narrative history of maps, navigation, and spatial imagination that explores how representation of space affected exploration, colonization, and knowledge production
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Mapping the World: How Cartography Shaped Empires and Ideas *Mapping the World: How Cartography Shaped Empires and Ideas* offers a sweeping narrative history of how the representation of space has fundamentally directed the course of human civilization. From prehistoric cave etchings and Babylonian clay tablets to the sophisticated algorithmic platforms of the digital age, this book argues that maps are never neutral depictions of reality, but rather powerful tools of persuasion, governance, and conquest. By tracing the evolution of cartographic techniques—such as the mathematical rigor of the Islamic Golden Age, the navigational revolution of portolan charts, and the strategic distortions of the Mercator projection—the text reveals how the way we draw the world has consistently dictated how we explore, colonize, and manage it.

The book delves into the transition from paper to pixels, exploring how the Cold War’s demand for precision gave rise to GIS, GPS, and satellite remote sensing. It examines the dual nature of modern mapping: while web-based apps and real-time data have democratized navigation and revolutionized humanitarian response, they have also introduced new layers of algorithmic bias and corporate surveillance. Moving beyond Western traditions, the narrative highlights the vital roles of Polynesian wayfinding and indigenous counter-mapping in challenging dominant spatial hierarchies. *Mapping the World* ultimately serves as a critical guide to spatial literacy, inviting readers to look beneath the surface of the "everyday map" to understand the ethics, power dynamics, and scientific innovations that continue to shape our planetary imagination.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The evolution of cartography from prehistoric cave paintings and Babylonian cosmologies to the mathematically rigorous 'Geographia' of Claudius Ptolemy.
  • How the 'Age of Conquest' utilized maps as instruments of power for colonial administration, land alienation, and the erasure of indigenous spatial knowledge.
  • The technological leap from hand-drawn portolan charts and copperplate engravings to the scientific precision of triangulation and national Ordnance Surveys.
  • The 'Digital Turn' in mapping, covering the development of Geographic Information Systems (GIS), the impact of GPS, and the democratization of data via web maps.
  • The political and ethical dimensions of modern cartography, including map-based propaganda, counter-mapping movements, and the influence of AI-driven algorithms.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students and enthusiasts of history, geography, and visual culture who want to understand the intersection of science and power. It is particularly suited for readers interested in how technical innovations like satellites and GIS have shaped geopolitics and human mobility. Additionally, it offers valuable insights for anyone curious about the hidden biases and ethical implications behind the everyday maps on their smartphones.

Author:

Gerald Cook

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

December 31, 2025

Word Count:

40,646 words

Reading Time:

2 hours 51 minutes

Sample:

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Ratings & Reviews

8 ratings