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During the nineteenth century, gridding, graphing, and surveying
proliferated as never before as nations and empires expanded into
hitherto "unknown" territories. Though nominally geared toward
justifying territorial claims and collecting scientific data,
expeditions also produced vast troves of visual and artistic
material. This book considers the explosion of expeditionary
mapping and its links to visual culture across the Americas,
arguing that acts of measurement are also aesthetic acts. Such
visual interventions intersect with new technologies, with
sociopolitical power and conflict, and with shifting public tastes
and consumption practices. Several key questions shape this
examination: What kinds of nineteenth-century visual practices and
technologies of seeing do these materials engage? How does
scientific knowledge get translated into the visual and
disseminated to the public? What are the commonalities and
distinctions in mapping strategies between North and South America?
How does the constitution of expeditionary lines reorder space and
the natural landscape itself? The volume represents the first
transnational and hemispheric analysis of nineteenth-century
cartographic aesthetics, and features the multi-disciplinary
perspective of historians, geographers, and art historians.
During the nineteenth century, gridding, graphing, and surveying
proliferated as never before as nations and empires expanded into
hitherto "unknown" territories. Though nominally geared toward
justifying territorial claims and collecting scientific data,
expeditions also produced vast troves of visual and artistic
material. This book considers the explosion of expeditionary
mapping and its links to visual culture across the Americas,
arguing that acts of measurement are also aesthetic acts. Such
visual interventions intersect with new technologies, with
sociopolitical power and conflict, and with shifting public tastes
and consumption practices. Several key questions shape this
examination: What kinds of nineteenth-century visual practices and
technologies of seeing do these materials engage? How does
scientific knowledge get translated into the visual and
disseminated to the public? What are the commonalities and
distinctions in mapping strategies between North and South America?
How does the constitution of expeditionary lines reorder space and
the natural landscape itself? The volume represents the first
transnational and hemispheric analysis of nineteenth-century
cartographic aesthetics, and features the multi-disciplinary
perspective of historians, geographers, and art historians.
Mountains appear in the oldest known maps yet their representation
has proven a notoriously difficult challenge for map makers. In
this essay, Ernesto Capello surveys the broad history of relief
representation in cartography with an emphasis on the allegorical,
commercial and political uses of mapping mountains. After an
initial overview and critique of the traditional historiography and
development of techniques of relief representation, the essay
features four clusters of mountain mapping emphases. These include
visions of mountains as paradise, the mountain as site of colonial
and postcolonial encounter, the development of elevation profiles
and panoramas, and mountains as mass-marketed touristed
itineraries.
In the seventeenth century, local Jesuits and Franciscans imagined
Quito as the \u201cnew Rome.\u201d It was the site of miracles and
home of saintly inhabitants, the origin of crusades into the
surrounding wilderness, and the purveyor of civilization to the
entire region. By the early twentieth century, elites envisioned
the city as the heart of a modern, advanced society—poised at the
physical and metaphysical centers of the world. In this original
cultural history, Ernesto Capello analyzes the formation of memory,
myth, and modernity through the eyes of QuitoÆs diverse
populations. By employing Mikhail BakhtinÆs concept of
chronotopes, Capello views the configuration of time and space in
narratives that defined QuitoÆs identity and its place in the
world. He explores the proliferation of these imaginings in
architecture, museums, monuments, tourism, art, urban planning,
literature, religion, indigenous rights, and politics. To Capello,
these tropes began to crystallize at the end of the nineteenth
century, serving as a tool for distinct groups who laid claim to
history for economic or political gain during the upheavals of
modernism. As Capello reveals, QuitoÆs society and its stories
mutually constituted each other. In the process of both destroying
and renewing elements of the past, each chronotope fed and
perpetuated itself. Modern Quito thus emerged at the crux of
Hispanism and Liberalism, as an independent global society
struggling to keep the memory of its colonial and indigenous roots
alive.
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