Publication | Open Access
Contours of a ‘Post-Critical’ Cartography—A Contribution to the Dissemination of Sociological Cartographic Research
58
Citations
32
References
2021
Year
Historical GeographyDecolonialitySociological MethodConstructed NatureSocial GeographyPhilosophy Of HistorySocial ChangeSocial SciencesIntellectual HistoryCultural GeographyAnalytical CartographyCartographyArt HistoryCritical TheoryPhilosophy (Philosophy Of Mind)Philosophy (French Literary Studies)ScenographySociological Cartographic ResearchCartographic RepresentationsLife ChancesSociologyCritical GeographyEthnographyAnthropologyArts
Abstract Since the 1980s, ‘critical cartography’ has been developing. Its merits lie in its awareness of the socially constructed nature of cartographic representations, the power relations involved, and the process-bound nature of cartographic practices. The ‘post-critical’ cartography proposed here takes up these merits but does so without following the categorical rejection of positivist ‘traditional’ cartography or the moral demarcation of what can and cannot be represented as well as the subordination of theories to the ‘critical’ paradigm. Instead, the ‘post-critical’ approach relies on the struggle for suitable theoretical frameworks—the normative reference horizon within the endeavor of cartography is the enhancement of life chances. In this respect, the prefix ‘post’ refers not only to a temporal ‘after’, but also to the perpetuation of central concerns of ‘critical’ cartography, simultaneously freeing it from such limitations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1