Every time you see a map of European colonies in a textbook, it should be accompanied by a map of anti-colonial resistance movements. pic.twitter.com/mD7Ky30zeb— The Decolonial Atlas (@decolonialatlas) February 18, 2022
interesting replies, folks we need a more updated version with Caribbean and Indian ocean colonies
maybe an interactive map (or just animated?) that progress through time?
i'm friends with some critical geographers and though they are mostly the kinds of geographers that don't make maps (they just shit on existing maps mostly, which is necessary but also lol), i have occasionally seen attempts at something decolonial. like indigenous peoples historical areas in the current US showing names for places in their languages (where available and can be expressed in a visual way) and approximate translations. they are, as always with the coolest maps, incomplete.
i read a cool line once somewhat recently that has stuck with me about how the real edges of maps are in the interior. i'm also reading a book called "How to Lie with Maps" which is about how maps can easily distort perception and common tricks that are used to imply beliefs. it cannot be overstated how much power there is in cartography, so obviously we should all be getting armed with this shit.
anyway, i love maps, so here's probably a collection of ones people around here might appreciate looking at:
https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/
i did some GIS coursework and am a big QGIS nerd. not a talented one, but a big fan of looking at maps and making maps and thinking about maps.
maybe an interactive map (or just animated?) that progress through time?
i'm friends with some critical geographers and though they are mostly the kinds of geographers that don't make maps (they just shit on existing maps mostly, which is necessary but also lol), i have occasionally seen attempts at something decolonial. like indigenous peoples historical areas in the current US showing names for places in their languages (where available and can be expressed in a visual way) and approximate translations. they are, as always with the coolest maps, incomplete.
i read a cool line once somewhat recently that has stuck with me about how the real edges of maps are in the interior. i'm also reading a book called "How to Lie with Maps" which is about how maps can easily distort perception and common tricks that are used to imply beliefs. it cannot be overstated how much power there is in cartography, so obviously we should all be getting armed with this shit.
anyway, i love maps, so here's probably a collection of ones people around here might appreciate looking at: https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/
i did some GIS coursework and am a big QGIS nerd. not a talented one, but a big fan of looking at maps and making maps and thinking about maps.