Ptolemy’s Revenge: A Critique of Historical Cartography
Abstract
This article calls for a new approach to historical cartography. Arguing that cartographic presentism obscures the local geographies of the past, the author reviews the imagery of current historical mapping as geocentric and presentistic. The analysis concentrates on two key images: the ubiquitous image of the globe as the icon of the present and David Harvey’s “time-space compression” chart. Harvey’s paradigmatic diagram and an earlier data map by Eugene Staley are discussed as misleading representations of globalization. The article envisions the alternative of a richer historical cartography that would combine the scientific purview of modern reference maps with historical maps and preglobal perspectives of space.
Subject
global historypreglobal geography
globalization
historical cartography
cartographic presentism
historical maps
modern world map
time-space compression
Collections
Citation
Schafer, Wolf (2005). Ptolemy’s Revenge: A Critique of Historical Cartography. ALA Map and Geography Round Table. Available electronically from https : / /hdl .handle .net /1969 .1 /129184.