Imagen del autor
24 Obras 300 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

J. B. Harley lectured in historical geography at the Universities of Liverpool and Exeter before moving to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. His ideas on the meaning of maps have influenced not just geographers and map historians but also students of art history and literature
Créditos de la imagen: Alexeile

Obras de J. B. Harley

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Harley, John Brian
Fecha de nacimiento
1932-07-24
Fecha de fallecimiento
1991-12-20
Lugar de sepultura
Newton Abbot, Devon, England, UK
Género
male
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
Ashley, Gloucestershire, UK
Lugar de fallecimiento
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Educación
University of Birmingham (PhD)
University of Oxford (University College)

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
epabooks | Oct 27, 2022 |
J. B. Harley is what you could really call a cartographic postmodernist. Like many po-mos, he makes some good points, but then preceeds to beat them to death and ram some Marxism or other unpalatable mush down your damned throat. Are maps just illustrations or are they texts that can be interpreted like any other document in history? Harley makes a great case for the latter, and I agree. Then. We are told to basically infer what we want as good postmodernists or infer via the damned Foucault (may he burn in Hades) and Derrida that we can imbue these map-texts with all sorts of power relationships and such. Thus, for example, a seventeenth-century plan of Paris shows the homes of all the well-to-do but none of the poor peasantry's homes. If I read it as a text, I could say that the poor are unimportant in society - yes this map has become another document in my evidence. But Harley would have us go one step further and say the map is full of power-knowledge and meant as a tool to keep the peasantry down. Crap. A poor person would never read it, can't, how could it keep him down? Still, he does show how to read (or, deconstruct) a map, and it is good. The last chapter, however, is crap. It is basically a "Cartographic Manifesto" metaphorically advocating that "cartographers of the world, unite" and stop helping those in power and being dupes to the Man. Again, crap.… (más)
½
1 vota
Denunciada
tuckerresearch | Feb 10, 2007 |
A collection of Harley's essays showing the range of his writings on maps. He consistently argues that maps convey much more that the geographical representation that meets the eye at first glance. He shows political and cultural subtexts are in all maps.
 
Denunciada
AlexTheHunn | Nov 22, 2005 |
This is Brian Harley's catalog of a map exhibit. The maps themselves are superb. One sees an array of images over time. Harley's commentary provides his particular insight into the subtext of maps. He contends that all maps are political in some degree.
½
 
Denunciada
AlexTheHunn | Nov 22, 2005 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
24
Miembros
300
Popularidad
#78,268
Valoración
½ 4.3
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
20
Idiomas
1

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