History of Indigenous Mapping (fwd)

Cliff Sloane (cesloane@MAROON.TC.UMN.EDU)
Tue, 7 Jun 1994 11:55:04 -0500

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 7 Jun 1994 09:49:00 CDT
From: History of Cartography Project <HISTCART%MACC.WISC.EDU@vm1.spcs.umn.edu>
To: Multiple recipients of list ORTRAD-L <ORTRAD-L@MIZZOU1.BITNET>
Subject: History of Indigenous Mapping

The following announcement is being posted to many listservs.
Apologies for any duplications, and thanks for your forbearance.

Please distribute freely to those not on this list.


THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY PROJECT
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN--MADISON

Call For Information:

Indigenous Mapping

As part of an ongoing multi-volume history of maps and mapmaking,
we are exploring mapping as it is practiced by indigenous cultures.
Our definition of "map" is extremely broad: Maps are graphic
representations that facilitate a spatial understanding of things,
concepts, conditions, processes, or events in the human world.
More than practical records of locations, maps are a visual
shorthand for a society's perception of space -- culture-bound
documents with social, economic, political, and religious meaning.
Worlds mapped can be geographical, celestial, or cosmographical.
The act of mapmaking can range from ephemeral gestures and dreams
to more conventional aspects of material culture such as painted
surfaces or objects.

We would very much appreciate hearing of people who have worked on
(or close to) this topic for the cultures of New Guinea and non-
Inkan South America. If you know of any related information,
articles, or books that address these issues, please let us know by
contacting the History of Cartography Project at:

histcart@geography.wisc.edu

With many thanks,

David Woodward, Editor and Principal Investigator
The History of Cartography Project
Department of Geography
University of Wisconsin-Madison