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link Denis Wood’s Dissertation – I Don’t Want To But I Will (PDF) « Making Maps: DIY Cartography

the genesis of geographic knowledge: a real-time developmental study of adolescent images of novel environments

photo austinkleon:

“Maps are arguments.” There’s a great Denis Wood interview by Blake Butler worth seeking out in last month’s Believer where they talk about cartography, maps, and Wood’s book, Everything Sings.

If you compare Google Earth and Google Maps, for example, Google Earth in its naked, unlayered form is a bunch of pictures. They’re not maps. You have no idea what you’re looking at, and to the extent that you do have some idea, it’s something you’re bringing to the image. Pictures and words don’t have anything to do with each other. If you look at Google Maps, on the other hand, or an annotated version of Google Earth, which turns it into a map—there’s a label that says this is a desert, this is a mountain, this is a river, this is Kazakhstan, this is Mongolia—well, that’s what makes a map something other than a picture…

Filed under: maps
Update: here’s a PDF of the interview on Wood’s site.

austinkleon:

“Maps are arguments.” There’s a great Denis Wood interview by Blake Butler worth seeking out in last month’s Believer where they talk about cartography, maps, and Wood’s book, Everything Sings.

If you compare Google Earth and Google Maps, for example, Google Earth in its naked, unlayered form is a bunch of pictures. They’re not maps. You have no idea what you’re looking at, and to the extent that you do have some idea, it’s something you’re bringing to the image. Pictures and words don’t have anything to do with each other. If you look at Google Maps, on the other hand, or an annotated version of Google Earth, which turns it into a map—there’s a label that says this is a desert, this is a mountain, this is a river, this is Kazakhstan, this is Mongolia—well, that’s what makes a map something other than a picture…

Filed under: maps

Update: here’s a PDF of the interview on Wood’s site.

1 year ago

February 9, 2012
reblogged via austinkleon