Imaginary Cartographies

52.1, Spring/Summer 2014
Karen Jacobs, Editor

 

In recent decades the map has emerged as a key site of cultural and imaginative reworking, and yet the history of such symbolic mediations between humans and their spatial environment is also ancient and complex. Volume 52.1 of ELN (Spring/Summer 2014) will investigate 鈥淚maginary Cartographies鈥 across centuries and cultural contexts to explore a range of these symbolic mediations. 鈥淚maginary Cartographies鈥 includes those methods of mapping literary space that generate both imaginative and culturally revealing understandings of recognizable and/or created worlds and their modes of habitation. The term refers to actual as well as purely conceptual maps, and includes spaces of considerable variability: from the mapping of cosmic, global, or local space, to charting the spaces of the body or the page. Geographers have argued that the social history of maps, unlike that of literature, art, or music, has few genuinely popular, or subversive modes of expression because maps pre-eminently are a language of power, not of protest; in this view, the map remains a site of territorial knowledge and state power, authority and jurisdiction, social codes and spatial disciplines鈥攐ne intent upon eliding its tactile and material conditions of production. 鈥淚maginary Cartographies鈥 welcomes approaches to mapping that complicate this account by considering subaltern or alternative cartographies鈥攃artographies that elude, interrupt, or disperse forms of power, or serve not-yet-imagined spectrums of interests.