Status
Available
Call number
Collection
Publication
Pomegranate (1994), 144 pages
Description
Examines the history of world mapmaking through 70 outstanding individual examples, discussing the maps and their makers in relation to their age and placing them within the context of the wider history of ideas.
User reviews
LibraryThing member AndreasJ
A history of mapmaking, specifically of world maps. It touches on the technicalities of projections and survey work, but the focus is on the maps as cultural products, analyzing their social rôle and how culture determines what is considered important to show (a lot of attention is paid to the
As far as hard facts go, it didn't tell me much I didn't already know, and some of the socio-cultural analysis struck me as superficial. That said, the array of splendid reproductions of historical maps makes it more than worth the money I spent on it.
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angels, personified winds, historical vignettes, etc, that used to accompany maps, tho, curiously, less to sea serpents and "here be dragons" signs).As far as hard facts go, it didn't tell me much I didn't already know, and some of the socio-cultural analysis struck me as superficial. That said, the array of splendid reproductions of historical maps makes it more than worth the money I spent on it.
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LibraryThing member tuckerresearch
The Image of the World is a slightly updated edition of Peter Whitfield’s 1994 work. Whitfield, who has published similar, image-laden overviews of cartographic and scientific history, offers a learned and accessible introduction to the story of (primarily Western) cartography from classical
The book is good for survey courses on the history of cartography, but is of little use for in-depth scholarship. Each map is described in detail, but there are no footnotes or reference material for each map; there is a general bibliography for further reading, a list of image credits, and a serviceable index. The illustrations are eye-pleasing, though some are too small to offer any detail, and much information is lost in the crease between pages. Still, Whitfield’s The Image of the World is a great introductory to the sweep of cartographic history and admirably does the job of presenting maps as more than geographical tools but cultural productions.
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times to the present. Laudably, this production is an eye-catching book that also serves to acquaint the lay reader with the notion that maps are not just quaint illustrations, but windows into the world of their creation.The book is good for survey courses on the history of cartography, but is of little use for in-depth scholarship. Each map is described in detail, but there are no footnotes or reference material for each map; there is a general bibliography for further reading, a list of image credits, and a serviceable index. The illustrations are eye-pleasing, though some are too small to offer any detail, and much information is lost in the crease between pages. Still, Whitfield’s The Image of the World is a great introductory to the sweep of cartographic history and admirably does the job of presenting maps as more than geographical tools but cultural productions.
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LibraryThing member Mapguy314
A review of maps from about 1100 to 1990
Subjects
Language
Original language
English
Original publication date
1994
Physical description
144 p.; 10.75 inches
ISBN
0876540809 / 9780876540800
Local notes
TK .