Cartographic encounters : indigenous peoples and the exploration of the New World

by John R. Short

Book, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

GA408.W47 S56

Publication

Publisher Unknown

Description

In this reinterpretation of U.S. history, the author argues that, until now, writing about and popular understanding of the exploration and mapping of the New World has largely ignored the pivotal role played by indigenous people.

User reviews

LibraryThing member tuckerresearch
A good book doing a good service. Short portrays the white exploration of North America (primarily) not as a tale of rugged, individualistic white men braving the wilderness, but explorers gathering information from the native peoples in a series of "cartographic encounters." Short skims expedition
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reports and maps for evidence (sometimes reading between the lines) of native informants. Short ably demonstrates this. He also has another parallel thesis: that Indians gave whites information for their own benefit, but that doing so sowed the seeds of their own destruction. When whites had the knowledge, they no longer needed indigenous information. This schemata works well with North America, but would fall down if he applied it to Latin America, thus the focus. That and the book is quite short and is a tad bit repetitive in places. It makes up for these drawbacks in its brevity and its ability to make you think. Recommended for all historians/enthusiasts of exploration, cartography, and Indian-white relations.
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Barcode

34662000732617
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