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Decolonizing The Map Cartography From Colony To Nation James R Akerman Editor

  • SKU: BELL-51442802
Decolonizing The Map Cartography From Colony To Nation James R Akerman Editor
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Decolonizing The Map Cartography From Colony To Nation James R Akerman Editor instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15 MB
Pages: 392
Author: James R. Akerman (editor)
ISBN: 9780226422817, 022642281X
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Decolonizing The Map Cartography From Colony To Nation James R Akerman Editor by James R. Akerman (editor) 9780226422817, 022642281X instant download after payment.

Almost universally, newly independent states seek to affirm their independence and identity by making the production of new maps and atlases a top priority. For formerly colonized peoples, however, this process neither begins nor ends with independence, and it is rarely straightforward. Mapping their own land is fraught with a fresh set of issues: how to define and administer their territories, develop their national identity, establish their role in the community of nations, and more. The contributors to Decolonizing the Map explore this complicated relationship between mapping and decolonization while engaging with recent theoretical debates about the nature of decolonization itself.
These essays, originally delivered as the 2010 Kenneth Nebenzahl, Jr., Lectures in the History of Cartography at the Newberry Library, encompass more than two centuries and three continents—Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Ranging from the late eighteenth century through the mid-twentieth, contributors study topics from mapping and national identity in late colonial Mexico to the enduring complications created by the partition of British India and the racialized organization of space in apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa. A vital contribution to studies of both colonization and cartography, Decolonizing the Map is the first book to systematically and comprehensively examine the engagement of mapping in the long—and clearly unfinished—parallel processes of decolonization and nation building in the modern world.

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