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Cartographica ii
Cartographica ii




“Simon de Passe’s Cartographic Portrait of Captain John Smith and a New England (1616/7).” Word & Image 26, no. “A Cautionary Historiography of ‘John Smith’s New England.’” Cartographica 46, no. Nicholas Canny and Philip Morgan, 87–112. “Knowledge and Cartography in the Early Atlantic.” In Oxford Handbook of the Atlantic World, c.1450–1820, ed. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, 2011. “Competition over Land, Competition over Empire: Public Discourse and Printed Maps of the Kennebec River, 1753–1755.” In Early American Cartographies, ed. Nielsen, Michael Harbsmeier, and Christopher J. “Field/Map: An Historiographic Review and Reconsideration.” In Scientists and Scholars in the Field: Studies in the History of Fieldwork and Expeditions, ed. “Academic Cartography, the Internal History of Cartography, and the Critical Study of Mapping Processes” (83–106) “A Content Analysis of Imago Mundi, 1935–2010” (107–31).1 (2015): 9–13.Ĭontributions to “People, Places and Ideas in the History of Cartography,” ed. “Cartography and Its Discontents.” In “‘Deconstructing the Map’: 25 Years On,” ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015. first edition, 27 November 2013, not archived by OUP.Ĭontributions to Cartography in the Twentieth Century, ed.New York: Oxford University Press, 26 July 2017. “History of Cartography.” In Oxford Bibliographies in Geography, ed. “Map History: Discourse and Process” (68–79) “Mapping, Survey and Science” (145–58) “The Rise of Systematic, Territorial Surveys” (159–72).“Preface” (xix–xxi) “Introduction” (xxiii–xxxvii) “British America” (222–26) “Celestial Mapping in the Enlightenment” (259–74) “Geodesy and the Size and Shape of the Earth” (433–39) (Geodetic Surveying) “Geodetic Surveying in the Enlightenment” (439–50) (Geographical Mapping) “Geographical Mapping in the Enlightenment” (474–89) “German States” (562–66) “Green, John” (586–88) (Height Measurement) “Altimetry” (600–2) “History and Cartography” (624–31) (Instruments for Angle Measurement) “Great Theodolite” (687–89) (Map Collecting) “Map Collecting in the Enlightenment” (756–59) (Measures, Linear) “Linear Measures in the Enlightenment” (926–27) “Meridians, Local and Prime” (936–42) “Modes of Cartographic Practice” (1017–19) “United States of America” (1527–29).Ĭontributions to The Routledge Handbook of Mapping and Cartography, ed.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2019. 2 (2020): 195–213.Ĭontributions to Cartography in the European Enlightenment, ed. “Creating ‘Discovery’: The Myth of Columbus, 1777–1828.” Terrae Incognitae 52, no. “Writing Cartography’s Enlightenment.” In special issue, “Enlightening Cartography: 25 Years of the Oxford Symposium on Cartography,” ed. “Of Maps, Libraries, and Lectures: The Nebenzahl Lectures and the Study of Map History.” Journal of Map & Geography Libraries: pre–print online for publication in 2022. Irfan Habib and Dhruv Raina (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2007), 25–68. 1–36), “The Ideologies and Practices of Mapping and Imperialism,” was reprinted in Social History of Science in Colonial India, ed. Reprinted, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1999 (ISBN 019–565172–3). Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1997. Mapping an Empire: The Geographic Construction of British India, 1765– 1843. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2019. ISBN: 978-5-3 cloth 978-2-1 e-book.Ĭartography: The Ideal and Its History. Cartography in the European Enlightenment.

cartographica ii

Peer-Reviewed Publications Books and Monographs A parallel list of my publications classified by topic provides links to downloadable PDFs for most of the works. This bibliography lists my publications by type, further distinguishing between peer-reviewed and other it excludes essays on this website.






Cartographica ii