The practice of mapmaking: Bridging the gap between critical/textual and ethnographical research methods

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
Boria Edoardo, Tania Rossetto
ISSN: 1911-9925

The recent shift from representation to practice within map theorization has led to a renewed interest in mapmaking
calling for both closer attention to the practices involved and the employment of ethnographic methodologies in
researching how maps come to life. A deep understanding of the making of maps, however, requires a combination of
different approaches, from the critical (text-oriented) to the ontogenetic (practice-oriented), from deconstruction to
narrative ethnography, and from cultural contextual readings to subjects-centred readings. Two map scholars with very
different backgrounds (phenomenology and political geography) seek to put these different approaches into action while
investigating mapmaking through a single case study. The life and work of Laura Canali, who has created maps for Limes:
Rivista Italiana di Geopolitica (the leading publication in Italy in the field of international relations) since 1993, are
analyzed to show how ethnography and critical reading are better used as complementary rather than conflicting
approaches. Comparison of the methodological framework applied here with more traditional approaches employed in
the field of historical cartography provides evidence of present-day changes in mapmaking and calls for an enhancement
of new practice-oriented methods of analysis. Finally, additional insights from creativity studies suggest that there is an
interesting line of research on ‘‘cartographic creativity’’ to be further developed.

© Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" - Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma