Maps of Belonging
MTA
Cartography, Nationalism, and the Politics of Territory in Modern Europe
2nd Edition
"Maps of Belonging: Cartography, Nationalism, and the Politics of Territory in Modern Europe" explores the profound and often overlooked role of maps in shaping European national identities and territorial conflicts from the late 18th century to the digital present. The book argues that maps were not mere reflections of political realities but active producers of them, naturalizing contingent histories and elevating selective narratives of belonging. It traces how Enlightenment-era scientific surveys provided the technical grammar for defining nations, while Romanticism infused these precise measurements with emotional and historical significance, creating a powerful fusion that transformed territory into a symbol of national soul.
The study emphasizes the crucial role of education, particularly school atlases and wall maps, in embedding national shapes and narratives into the minds of generations of Europeans. These pedagogical tools, reinforced by print culture and commercial publishers, standardized visual representations of nations, turning countries into recognizable silhouettes and colors. However, the book also highlights how this quest for national coherence through maps often clashed with multi-ethnic realities, leading to the use of ethnographic and historical maps as tools for propaganda, justifying irredentist claims, and fueling conflicts in regions like the Balkans and the partitioned lands of Poland.
The narrative spans major historical shifts, from the revolutions of 1848, where maps became tools for insurgents to imagine new state formations, to the imperial cartographies of the Habsburg, Ottoman, and Romanov empires, which struggled to map their diverse populations without unraveling. It further details the role of maps in World Wars I and II, where they served as instruments of military strategy, propaganda, and ultimately, the brutal redrawing of borders through displacement and ethnic cleansing. The Cold War introduced new cartographies of ideological division, symbolized by the Iron Curtain, while the subsequent push for European integration sought to reimagine space as a cohesive, borderless entity.
Finally, the book examines the rise of "counter-maps" and grassroots cartography by minorities and social movements, challenging state-centric narratives. It concludes by exploring the "digital turn," where GIS, web maps, and satellite imagery offer new ways to visualize and contest territory, creating both unprecedented opportunities for connection and new battlegrounds for national narratives in a globally networked world. Ultimately, "Maps of Belonging" reveals how maps, far from being neutral documents, are powerful arguments about space, history, and identity, continuously shaping and reflecting the volatile politics of modern Europe.
This book is for historians, geographers, political scientists, and anyone interested in the complex relationship between territory, identity, and power in modern Europe. It would particularly appeal to readers who want to understand how seemingly objective maps have been used as powerful tools for nation-building, conflict, and the shaping of collective memory, extending from the Enlightenment to the digital age.
January 11, 2026
65,374 words
4 hours 35 minutes
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