Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Against the Map Adam Sills

Against the Map By Adam Sills

Against the Map by Adam Sills


$51,39
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

Uses the methodologies of critical geography, as well as literary criticism and theory, to detail the conflicted and often adversarial relationship between cartographic and literary representations of the nation and its geography.

Against the Map Summary

Against the Map: The Politics of Geography in Eighteenth-Century Britain by Adam Sills

Over the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the increasing accuracy and legibility of cartographic projections, the proliferation of empirically based chorographies, and the popular vogue for travel narratives served to order, package, and commodify space in a manner that was critical to the formation of a unified Britain. In tandem with such developments, however, a trenchant anti-cartographic skepticism also emerged. This critique of the map can be seen in many literary works of the period that satirize the efficacy and value of maps and highlight their ideological purposes.

Against the Map argues that our understanding of the production of national space during this time must also account for these sites of resistance and opposition to hegemonic forms of geographical representation, such as the map.

This study utilizes the methodologies of critical geography, as well as literary criticism and theory, to detail the conflicted and often adversarial relationship between cartographic and literary representations of the nation and its geography. While examining atlases, almanacs, itineraries, and other materials, Adam Sills focuses particularly on the construction of heterotopias in the works of John Bunyan, Aphra Behn, Jonathan Swift, Daniel Defoe, Samuel Johnson, and Jane Austen. These other spaces, such as neighborhood, home, and country, are not reducible to the map but have played an equally important role in the shaping of British national identity.

Ultimately, Against the Map suggests that nation is forged not only in concert with the map but, just as important, against it.

Against the Map Reviews

Sills persuasively argues that there is no coherent British national identity based on a coherent mapping of national space. Rather, national identity hinged on local places and neighborhoods through which the individual connected with the national. The nature of those neighborhoods was the subject of diverse discourses, promoted by the emergent public sphere and shaped through their interplay of textual and graphic maps. An original book grounded on wide-ranging but secure scholarship. - Matthew H. Edney, University of Southern Maine, author of Cartography: The Ideal and Its History

This ambitious book gathers a stunning variety of maps and texts across the long eighteenth century to show how local spaces refashion themselves in relation to the nation as that nation behaves imperially towards its own. - Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia Press, author of Grammars of Approach: Landscape, Narrative, and the Linguistic Picturesque

About Adam Sills

Adam Sills is Associate Professor of English at Hofstra University.

Additional information

NLS9780813945996
9780813945996
0813945992
Against the Map: The Politics of Geography in Eighteenth-Century Britain by Adam Sills
New
Paperback
University of Virginia Press
2021-10-30
312
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Against the Map