Reading J.B. Harley: The New Nature of Maps

Posted in readings and meetings with tags , , , , on October 22, 2008 by iprhhc

At our second meeting (October 15th), the Map History Reading Group’s first in-depth discussion of a mutual text treated Paul Laxton’s collection of selected essays by historical geographer and iconoclast J.B. Harley: The New Nature of Maps: Essays in the History of Cartography (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2001). Members of the group acknowledged the value of reading maps as cultural texts that are ideologically encoded, from the margins to the center. We found the greatest interest in his treatment of particular maps or periods in map history, among them discussions of differences in early modern European regimes’ containment of new territorial discoveries, eighteenth century English domestic and international cartography, and the earliest maps (17th century) of North American colonies (later, New England).

We noted the limitation of Harley’s view in reading map history entirely through the lens of professional cartography and its print products. Harley is mum on the question of maps in manuscript. He has little to say about maps produced by non-professionals, except insofar as native guides provided European surveyors with oral reports or temporary sketches in the dirt. Moreover, the range of Harley’s discussion was limited almost entirely to European cartography from the early modern period forward, with few cross-cultural comparisons of cartographic products. 

This produced, for some of our readers, a tautology in which Harley finds the interests of the landed, wealthy, and powerful of a society largely determine the messages of maps, both explicit and implicit, and those interpreting the ideology of maps are then left to tease out just what those messages might be for that segment of European society at a given historical moment. The interests of cultural elites is presented as more unified, we thought, than was actual or probable — we found no attempt to view maps as a site of tensions within the upper ranks or with those on the ascent.  This tautology, moreover, was attached in discussion to Harley’s reliance on Foucauldian technique, which tends to consider institutional power and top-down distributions of social power, however cryptically encoded.  I found myself that Harley throws over Derridean method in favor of Foulcaut’s when working to the telos of his readings, finding a conclusion about the instability of texts and their systems of signfication dissatisfying in the face of the potential to touch upon broader, and actual, social impacts of discursive formations. 

However, I was skeptical of some challenges to a top-down reading of map history in the broad.  I’ll grant that scholars ought not to accept generalized claims easily, but I am inclined by my own studies and anthropological hobbiest’s interests in cultures Western and non, to consider comprehensive and authoritative maps very likely to have been the product of cultural elites, either directly through their order or indirectly through an appeal to their patronage or interests in hopes of currying favor and representing the world as it is most accepted as being (which itself reinforces a status quo).  Perhaps such maps are the work of imperial projects, from whatever people or region they spring.  That much tautology I will acknowledge.  

When the example of indigenous cultures having sophisticated cartographic knowledge was raised as a specific means of challenging Harley’s top-down readings of map history, I wanted to acknowledge that sophistication, especially with respect to inhabited and explored territories, but also to suggest that indigenous cultures such as those in Meso-America (Aztec in particular) were also capable of domestic imperialism and likely used the cartographic methods they had developed to secure and announce territory.  I claimed the Aztecs were a society founded on a pronounced hierarchy (nobles on top, with priest and warriors, then a small merchant segment, with a foundation of slaves), and that their tactics in managing knowledge and territory both were likely to be as markedly unpleasant as the Europeans’.  There is some evidence, for example, that Aztecs of one city-state sent around the skinned palms and faces of human sacrificial offerings to allied neighboring settlements as a forewarning against dissent as well as a notice of spiritual obeyance.  I am certainly no expert in Aztec society (my understanding is based on the time of the Triple Alliance and its encounter with Cortez), but I have found further discussion and a native narrative map since that seem to support my argument.  For example, the small merchant class of this period was often used by the ruling class (royals, nobles) to spy in neighboring territories, and one Aztec map I viewed showed a plan of attack against neighbors.

At least one reader reacted to the politicization of historical map study, saying that with the advent of GIS and other quantitative methods, it would be a shame if we now only limited ourselves to such considerations.  We need not regress to a time when these issues were ignored or did not matter, but we need to consider, too, what questions we can now explore through newly available technologies.  Our next meeting will be held November 11 from 5:30-8:30 (contact Max Edelson for location and registration details); we will gather for an introduction to GIS offered by ATLAS (Maryalice Wu leads the section of interest to us, as supervisor of graduate statistical and GIS consultants) and generously funded through IPRH’s reading group stipend.

Kelly Searsmith

Map Hoax?: Chinese Discovery of America

Posted in historical maps in the news on October 17, 2008 by iprhhc

National Geographic News ran a story in 2006 that I thought might amuse reading group members. A Beijing attorney who collects maps claimed that an antique Chinese map he purchased (supposedly an 18th century reproduction of an early 15th century map) demonstrated that a Chinese admiral had discovered North America in 1418. His claims have not been validated or accepted; some critics believe the map is actually based not on one from 15th century China but 17th century France. Click here for the complete story, with map image.

Kelly Searsmith

great map quotations: George Eliot

Posted in quotations with tags , on October 14, 2008 by iprhhc

“No; for some reason or other she preferred staying at Lowick. But her vagrant mind must be reduced to order: there was an art in self-discipline; and she walked round and round the brown library considering by what sort of manoeuvre she could arrest her wandering thoughts. Perhaps a mere task was the best means—something to which she must go doggedly. Was there not the geography of Asia Minor, in which her slackness had often been rebuked by Mr. Casaubon? She went to the cabinet of maps and unrolled one: this morning she might make herself finally sure that Paphlagonia was not on the Levantine coast, and fix her total darkness about the Chalybes firmly on the shores of the Euxine. A map was a fine thing to study when you were disposed to think of something else, being made up of names that would turn into a chime if you went back upon them. Dorothea set earnestly to work, bending close to her map, and uttering the names in an audible, subdued tone, which often got into a chime. She looked amusingly girlish after all her deep experience—nodding her head and marking the names off on her fingers, with a little pursing of her lip, and now and then breaking off to put her hands on each side of her face and say, ‘Oh dear! oh dear!’”

– George Eliot, Middlemarch, Chapter LXXXIII; serialized 1871-1872

commentary: This passage from George Eliot’s Middlemarch depicts the novel’s protagonist, Dorothea Casaubon, a young widow, attempting to discipline her under-occupied, overly emotional, feminine mind with cartography. The scene suggests cartography is a form of rational male knowledge, here identified with her late husband, an aged scholar, and so rendered stuffy and irrelevant, rather than superior and valued.

Map images elsewhere in the novel appear as dirty, old, and ineffective at prompting decided action in the present. The impotence of maps before Dorothea’s impulses is treated with gentle humor here; we are meant to like that she cannot be so mastered by them, that she cannot indeed use them to master herself. The foreign sounding names on maps become a kind of music, the sort that turns the “esoteric exotic” to echo Harley (a whimsical dream) — and so an excuse, ironically, for intellectual drift rather than command. This scene sets up a companion, in which Dorothea will finally fail in her attempt at noblely resisting her passion for Will Ladislaw, who is to become her second husband and a man of action (that is, however ironically we might be inclined to take it ourselves, an MP). The implication may be that now Dorothea will be able to travel from Lowick, to live a more active life, too, traveling across England, rather than merely studying maps (and dipping herself in old men’s dust — she is too pretty and passionate for that).

Kelly Searsmith

“History of Cartography” vs. “Historical Cartography”

Posted in cartographic concepts on October 13, 2008 by iprhhc

Dear All:

First let me introduce myself: I’m Matthew Edney, director of The History of Cartography series at UW-Madison and Osher Chair in the history of cartography at the University of Southern Maine. Max Edelson has been letting me know about what you are all doing at UI on map history: it is all very cool! I hope you can keep this interdisciplinary group going and productive, in the face of all the other demands we face.

Max sent me the link to this blog this morning, and I had two immediate responses: very nice and “but …” Max immediately suggested that I post my concern, so I am!

The issue is the title of the blog: “Historical Cartography at IPRH.” This runs afoul somewhat of a distinction first drawn by R. A. Skelton in his posthumous work, Maps: A Historical Survey of their Study and Collecting (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972). To be honest, the distinction might have been made by David Woodward, who edited Skelton’s incomplete typescript for publication. According to this distinction:

historical cartography is the practice of representing past landscapes, events, and other phenomona in maps. As Walter Goffart has shown in his (admittedly complex) Historical Atlases: The First Three Hundred Years, 1570-1870 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), this practice was first undertaken by Abraham Ortelius in the Parergon that he added to his wildly successful Theatrum orbis terrarum (1st ed., 1570) and has been pursued by many other people since.

history of cartography is the study of the practices and products of cartography in the past.

From this perspective, historical cartography forms one topic of study within the history of cartography.

Of course, this whole problem can be avoided if we recognize that “cartography” is an idealization created in the early nineteenth century as part of Europeans’ distinction of themselves from the other peoples of the world. In this formulation, Europeans did cartography (rational, liberal, moral), but other peoples did/could not (irrational, despotic, amoral). I have a brief statement of this in my chapter in a book which should be out later this Fall: James R. Akerman, ed., The Imperial Map: Cartography and the Mastery of Empire (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008).

From this perspective, I actually have come to refer in my own work to the field of study as map history.

Introducing: Cartography of American Colonization Database (CACD)

Posted in Cartography of American Colonization Database (CACD) on October 13, 2008 by iprhhc

Vernon Burton and I applied for and were awarded $25,000 from NEH to begin developing the Cartography of American Colonization Database at I-CHASS (Institute for Computing in the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences).  The UIUC Research Board has just chipped in for 2 RAs for the spring as well!  The goal: organize digital map content on the web (and so much more!).  I’ll update our progress here. For now, a press release.

–Max Edelson

great cartographic quotations: Melville #1

Posted in quotations on October 13, 2008 by iprhhc

In good time making the desired longitude upon the equator, a few leagues west of the Gallipagos, we spent several weeks chassezing across the Line, to and fro, in unavailing search for our prey.  For some of their hunters believe, that whales, like the silver ore in Peru, run in veins through the ocean.  So, day after day, daily; and week after week, weekly, we traversed the self-same longitudinal intersection of the self-same Line; till we were almost ready to swear that we felt the ship strike every time her keel crossed that imaginary locality.

–Herman Melville, Mardi (1849)

Mapping History

Posted in readings and meetings with tags , , , on October 11, 2008 by iprhhc

The Historical Cartography Reading Group formed this Fall at the (University of)  Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities (IPRH) has set a course for reading and actually mapping (through GIS technologies) the ideological charts of historical cultural voyages, explorations of the self, in varying forms, and the other.  We are reading, as a foundational text, the essays of J. Brian Harley (1932-1991), collected by Paul Laxton (a professor of historical geography) in a posthumous greatest-hits volume: The New Nature of Maps: Essays in the History of Cartography (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2001).  Harley is known in “history of map” circles as the hero-worshipped iconoclast who advocated ideologically-informed readings of maps, that went beyond long-standing conversations about their accuracy, their use as literal expressions of scientific study and territorial ownership, and so as instruments of intellectual, economic, and political power.  Harley is interested in reading maps using techniques borrowed from other disciplines, such as art history (especially in applying Erwin Panofsky’s levels of meaning), drawing mainly upon Foucault’s Archaeology of Knowledge for his theoretical foundation.

The group is set to discuss Harley at our October 15th (7:30 p.m.) meeting, to be held at 428 Main Library, where we will also enjoy a slide show of maps assembled from those discussed in the Harley volume.  Readers interested in exploring Harley’s legacy may, in addition to reading this valuable collection, turn to the multivolume History of Cartography series that Harley began with David Woodward.  The first volume was published in 1987, and the series is now well underway (a link is provided from our site).

Because our receipt of the Harley book was delayed, the group struck into a special volume in Social Science History (vol. 24, No. 3, Fall 2000) that treats digital historical cartography: “Historical GIS: The Spatial Turn in Social Science History” (available through Project Muse). Since there were so many articles from which to choose, the group discussion remained general.  Not a few were anxious about the application of GIS (geographical information systems) technologies to historical study, which is as yet a new method, but one we believe holds interest and promise.  Personally, I found enlightening Bertrum MacDonald and Fiona Black’s “Using GIS for Spatial and Temporal Analyses in Print Culture Studies: Some Opportunities and Challenges,” which outlines in detail how GIS has and can move forward history of the book studies.  Interesting for me, too, was their observation that the nineteenth-century has been a special focus of GIS-enabled studies, because of the availability of quantitative records that lend themselves to the construction of digital databases.

The group is set to participate in two training sessions by the ATLAS technologies group at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the first of which will be a hands-on introduction to GIS and the second of which will give us a start at applying GIS technologies to our own research projects.  The range of research interests in the group should make our discussions as well as our GIS applications a deep learning experience.  Among us are scholars of Medieval Japan, Colonial America, Early Modern Iberian Peninsula, Eighteenth-Century Russia, and Nineteenth-Century Britain–each with variant approaches to our subjects.  Amongst this group of historians, I am the only literature scholar, but I, too, am interested in what new revelations maps as cultural texts may inspire.

Kelly Searsmith