Thursday 17 April 2008

Re-thinking Maps

Key words: Maps, cartography, Keith Jenkins, History, ideology, representation

Although apparently objective representations of the world, maps are rhetorical tools which express, like any other portrayal of reality, the values and ideology of those who design them.

Last meeting we went on talking about Keith Jenkins’ critical perception of History[1]. We recalled that the British historiographer had gone as far as to state that History was a literary construct. For him, no matter how much constrained historians are by historical evidence, when interpreting and writing about the past, they cannot do away with their own values and ideology. The work of the historian is, in consequence, contaminated with his personal views and ideology.

Of course, Jenkins arguments (which follow authors like Foucault, Lyotard and Eagleton) do not only help us establish a critical relationship with History, but with the entire body of representations about reality, whether past or present. As we discussed in class, the principles to which Jenkins refers can be easily applied to documentaries, journalism and any other type of portrayal of reality. Any representation is always mediated by individual perceptions, interests, values and ideology. It’s impossible to face reality without our own personal and cultural bulk. And this, as we agreed in class, also applies to cartography.

In our positivist world, we tend to mistakenly see geographic maps as objective representations of physical, static territories. However, the word ‘representation’ alone should make us doubt of this seeming objectiveness. Although the cartographer is also constrained by reality, the creative freedom he enjoys is not so far from that of the realist portrait artist. The cartographer is supposed to portray the physical reality in the best possible way, but which is the best possible way? This sole question implies that there is more than one way to portray the world. It’s just that since cartographers are used to follow a certain number of conventions, we tend to think of them as natural, as if there were no alternatives. But if we did away with these conventions, it would be possible to see how much arbitrariness and ideology is contained in maps. Let’s consider some examples.

  • One of these conventions could be the European centrality. Europe appears at the centre in most maps of the world. Actually, there’s no reason –other than historical and political prominence- to place Europe at the centre. Why not China, Australia or America? Or the Pacific Ocean? Having Europe at the centre and top of the map is saying a lot about western history, politics and power relationships. This consideration must have crossed somebody’s mind when the Chicago Daily Tribune published, during the peak years of the Second World War, a map with the US at the centre and top. The map was overtly entitled America–the Real Center of the World Today [map 2]. Maps of this sort are still published nowadays, mostly –of course- in the US.

  • Another convention, although in a slow process of being changed by other alternatives, is the use of the Mercator projection [map 1 and 2] as a way to represent the spherical globe on a flat surface. The problem with this projection is that it distorts the relative size of regions, showing an increase in size according to the proximity to the poles. Consequently, Greenland appears to be similar in size to Africa, although the continent is thirteen times bigger than the island. The result of this projection is a world in which the territories in the northern hemisphere –closer to the pole- look bigger than those round the Equator. German historian and filmmaker Arno Peters noticed that this distortion favoured the look of the developed countries, while giving a belittled perspective of the developing ones. Thus, in 1974, he devised a new flat projection that aimed at producing a proportional map of the world [map 3]. The result –widely controversial- shows a very atypical view, with a huge, vast African continent below a small, dwarfed Europe.
© 2007, www.ODTmaps.com

  • Perhaps, the most naturalized and widespread convention is the North-up orientation. There are no geographical or astronomical reasons why North must be on top and South at the bottom. However, the political and ideological implications of this arrangement can be many, mostly when most of the poor countries lie South of the developed ones. In 1979, Stuart McArthur, a ‘resentful’ Australian, published what he called McArthur’s Universal Corrective Map of the World, showing Australia at the top and centre [map 4]. Different South-up maps have been published since then, but they have always implied an act of transgression. For us, people from the South, these maps bring a definite new perspective. How would we see the world today if we had been taught that we were on top? Doesn’t it make a difference? [map 5 -click on the map to enlarge]

© 2008, www.ODTmaps.com

All in all, nothing seems to be innocent. In all human productions there’s always somebody –consciously or unconsciously- expressing his values and culture. Ideology speaks through any representation of reality. Our task, I infer, would be to look at those representations critically, and to pick up for us the one that better goes with our own values and beliefs.

________________

[1] Jenkins, Keith (2003) Re-thinking History, Routledge, Londres.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

I consider MacArthur´spoint of view interesting.If we had been taught that we were on top, we would believe,psychologically speaking,that we are as powerful and strong as American people.We would be convinced of our central role in the world and we would act like this.So, many children in the U.S.A. would eat rubbish as in South America children do.
Susana

kenap4 said...

Taking for granted that these upside down maps exist, it's our job to show them to our students and encourage them to look at these representations critically and let them decide for themselves what maps are valid and useful for them. Let's open their minds to this politically and economically dominated world...

kenap4 said...

Do you REALLY think that if US had been in the South, we would have been as powerful as them? Taking into account that we are not an industrialized country and we have never been?

Anonymous said...

just checking

Anonymous said...

Hi to everybody. Supossing that a few people of the inhabitated and cold antartic pole decide themselves to be the centre of the world just because of a whimsical believe. Does this mean that the functioning of the whole world will change because of their wish? Perhaps maps will change just to satisfy their point of view. However, maps are just a representation.For this matter they do not represent reality but a point of view. In this sense,I mean, in the real sense, the world won't change to become a more polar world!!!
nestor

Anonymous said...

Kenap4: Precisely because they are industrialized potentially, they are set "on the top". On the other hand,are you sure that we have never been industrialized ? There were many factories some decades ago, such as F�brica Argentina de Alpargatas,I.K.A. ( automotores ),Siam Ditella, etc.
Susana

Anonymous said...

Yes, Susan,you are right, we were a industrialized country. However, after the process of desindustrialization and privatization carried out during the 80's and the 90's,we lost that nostalgic identity. Just let me remind you what happen to 'La Cantabrica', in Castelar, or the state merchant float E.L.M.A. They were all dissolved and sold to private investors just for a few coins. I agree with you, we were industrial. Perhaps, History should remind young people of those strange events occurring in the past,just for a better understanding.

kenap4 said...

I think Nestor is right, although I was talking about those years instead of nowadays... I never said that we have NEVER been an industrialized country, I said that we were not an industrialized country at the same time they were. Argentina is a very young country compared to the rest of the world...

Anonymous said...

IT´S ALL RIGHT.WELL,WELL,WELL

Anonymous said...

Kenap4: First you had said:" (...)we are not an industrialized country(...)":( we agree) (...)and we have never been.": (this is the point of disagreement) .Later you said:"(...)we were not an industrialized country at the same time they were.". Now, let's think, Was there a long time of difference between The U.S.A. and Argentina about industrialization ?.It's true that Argentina is a very young country compared to the rest of the world, because America is young from the point of view of the Western world and both Argentina and The United States are set in America.
Susan

Anonymous said...

Nestor: All of us suffered that " process of desindustrialization and privatization carried out during the 80´s and the 90's",but I don´t think that " (...)we lost that nostalgic identity."According to Macmillan dictionary, "NOSTALGIA: thoughts about happy times in your past, often mixed with the wish to be back in the past" .Wouldn't you like to have an industrialized country again? If you say YES, you are a nostalgic Argentinian person.
Susan.

Anonymous said...

You might be right. The million dollar question is: Who do not wish to have an industrialized country with prosperity for everyone? Everybody wish the best for their countries. If 38.000.000 Argentinian souls believe the best for their country,and for this matter, they are regarded as NOSTALGICS ? Ok, then, they are nostalgics. What's bad in that? However,Careful, my humble point of view concerning nostalgic has to do with the act of remembering good events of the past to overcome a transitional present sentiment of anxiety or fear or disgust. Once this sensation is overcome, one should return to the present in order to avoid living an eternal past. And, here is where I cannot grasp your idea. Are you considering that a nostalgic person who wishes the best for everyone is a someone living in an eternal past? Or, that this person in question is just undergoing a transitional period of his life?

ok bye

Anonymous said...

Nestor: I do not consider relevant to speak about nostalgia. Previously you had said:"(...)we lost that nostalgic identity(...)", in your opinion above you said"(...)the best for their country(...)then they are nostalgic(...)"In conclusion ,did we lose our nostalgic identity?
See you.
Susan

Flavia said...

Of course I agree with the idea that maps express ideology.The political and economic interests of whom designed them and the production of them can not be taken as an unconscious act.However,as other maps exists as the posted with the south on top and the north at the bottom,it is useful to work with them.As Kenap says,it is good to show our students something different to what they probably are acostume to see and study.They can express their opinions,debate,and take their own conclusions...