HPS.CESEE is an online platform about the history of science in Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe. Our aim is to facilitate the exchange of information among HPS scholars in the region stretching from Prague to Perm and from Tallinn to Tirana. HPS.CESEE is a community project: please send us your news in order to have them reach a larger audience! You can find us on blogger, facebook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/hps.cesee/) and twitter (https://twitter.com/hpscesee).
Tuesday, 5 November 2019
Steven Seegel. Map Men: Transnational Lives and Deaths of Geographers in the Making of East Central Europe. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-226-43849-8.
More than just colorful clickbait or pragmatic city grids, maps are often deeply emotional tales: of political projects gone wrong, budding relationships that failed, and countries that vanished. In Map Men, Steven Seegel takes us through some of these historical dramas with a detailed look at the maps that made and unmade the world of East Central Europe through a long continuum of world war and revolution. As a collective biography of five prominent geographers between 1870 and 1950—Albrecht Penck, Eugeniusz Romer, Stepan Rudnyts’kyi, Isaiah Bowman, and Count Pál Teleki—Map Men reexamines the deep emotions, textures of friendship, and multigenerational sagas behind these influential maps.
Taking us deep into cartographical archives, Seegel re-creates the public and private worlds of these five mapmakers, who interacted with and influenced one another even as they played key roles in defining and redefining borders, territories, nations—and, ultimately, the interconnection of the world through two world wars. Throughout, he examines the transnational nature of these processes and addresses weighty questions about the causes and consequences of the world wars, the rise of Nazism and Stalinism, and the reasons East Central Europe became the fault line of these world-changing developments.
At a time when East Central Europe has surged back into geopolitical consciousness, Map Men offers a timely and important look at the historical origins of how the region was defined—and the key people who helped define it.
Publisher's page: https://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo27760776.html
Introduction: https://www.academia.edu/38972227/Steven_Seegel_Introduction_to_Map_Men_Transnational_Lives_and_Deaths_of_Geographers_in_the_Making_of_East_Central_Europe_Chicago_University_of_Chicago_Press_2018_
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Working Group on ‘Risk, Health, and State Socialism: Central and Eastern Europe, 1950s-1980s’
Working Group on ‘Risk, Health, and State Socialism: Central and Eastern Europe, 1950s-1980s’ We invite scholars to join a working group e...
-
Téma: Mining and processing of minerals in Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the 20th century from the perspective of environmental ...
-
Halina Zwolska: Uczniowie Szkoły Głównej Koronnej 1780-1795 [Students of the Principal School of the Realm 1780-1795]. Kraków: Księgarnia Ak...
-
Neither Arkadii nor Boris Strugatskii had originally intended to make a living in writing. Arkadii dreamed of becoming an astronomer...
No comments:
Post a Comment