Mapping Travel : The Origins and Conventions of Western Journey Maps

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Title: Mapping Travel : The Origins and Conventions of Western Journey Maps
Description: More often than not, readers of travel narratives can expect to find at least one map—if not several—showing, as English privateer William Dampier wrote, “the Course of the Voyage,” that is, where the author-traveler went and, implicitly, a sense of what was seen and experienced. Dampier used a now-common cartographic strategy to tell the story from beginning to end as well as around significant places on the way by marking the journey with a ‘pricked'line. Despite the lines'popularity and present ubiquity, the complex intellectual and material process of considering travel as a continuum rather than as a series of stops along the way and of plotting a journey onto a map have attracted relatively little academic attention. Drawing on a thousand years of European travel writing and map-making, Jordana Dym suggests that after centuries of text-based itineraries and on-the-spot directions guiding travelers and constituting their reports, maps in the fifteenth century emerged as tools for Europeans to support and report the results of land and sea travel. Called in subsequent centuries'route maps,''itinerary maps,'and'travel maps,'often interchangeably, what Dym defines as journey maps added lines of travel to show where travelers had been. Sine their emergence, most have taken one of two forms: itinerary maps, which connected stages as points with a line, and route maps, which tracked unbroken lines between endpoints. In the seventeenth century, the conventions of journey mapping were codified and increasingly incorporated into travel writing and other genres that represented individual travel. With each succeeding generation, these linear journey maps have become increasingly common and complex, responding to changes in forms of transportation, such as air and motor car ‘flight'and print technology, especially the advent of multi-color printing. This is their story.
Authors: Jordana Dym
Resource Type: eBook.
Subjects: Early maps--Europe--History, Cartography--Europe--History
Categories: HISTORY / Reference, REFERENCE / Atlases, Gazetteers & Maps, TRAVEL / Essays & Travelogues, TRAVEL / Reference
Database: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
FullText Links:
  – Type: ebook-pdf
Text:
  Availability: 0
Header DbId: nlebk
DbLabel: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
An: 3026163
RelevancyScore: 1103
AccessLevel: 6
PubType: eBook
PubTypeId: ebook
PreciseRelevancyScore: 1103.19409179688
IllustrationInfo
ImageInfo – Size: thumb
  Target: https://rps2images.ebscohost.com/rpsweb/othumb?id=NL$3026163$PDF&s=r
– Size: medium
  Target: https://rps2images.ebscohost.com/rpsweb/othumb?id=NL$3026163$PDF&s=d
Items – Name: Title
  Label: Title
  Group: Ti
  Data: Mapping Travel : The Origins and Conventions of Western Journey Maps
– Name: Abstract
  Label: Description
  Group: Ab
  Data: More often than not, readers of travel narratives can expect to find at least one map—if not several—showing, as English privateer William Dampier wrote, “the Course of the Voyage,” that is, where the author-traveler went and, implicitly, a sense of what was seen and experienced. Dampier used a now-common cartographic strategy to tell the story from beginning to end as well as around significant places on the way by marking the journey with a ‘pricked'line. Despite the lines'popularity and present ubiquity, the complex intellectual and material process of considering travel as a continuum rather than as a series of stops along the way and of plotting a journey onto a map have attracted relatively little academic attention. Drawing on a thousand years of European travel writing and map-making, Jordana Dym suggests that after centuries of text-based itineraries and on-the-spot directions guiding travelers and constituting their reports, maps in the fifteenth century emerged as tools for Europeans to support and report the results of land and sea travel. Called in subsequent centuries'route maps,''itinerary maps,'and'travel maps,'often interchangeably, what Dym defines as journey maps added lines of travel to show where travelers had been. Sine their emergence, most have taken one of two forms: itinerary maps, which connected stages as points with a line, and route maps, which tracked unbroken lines between endpoints. In the seventeenth century, the conventions of journey mapping were codified and increasingly incorporated into travel writing and other genres that represented individual travel. With each succeeding generation, these linear journey maps have become increasingly common and complex, responding to changes in forms of transportation, such as air and motor car ‘flight'and print technology, especially the advent of multi-color printing. This is their story.
– Name: Author
  Label: Authors
  Group: Au
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="AR" term="%22Jordana+Dym%22">Jordana Dym</searchLink>
– Name: TypePub
  Label: Resource Type
  Group: TypPub
  Data: eBook.
– Name: Subject
  Label: Subjects
  Group: Su
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Early+maps--Europe--History%22">Early maps--Europe--History</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="DE" term="%22Cartography--Europe--History%22">Cartography--Europe--History</searchLink>
– Name: SubjectBISAC
  Label: Categories
  Group: Su
  Data: <searchLink fieldCode="ZK" term="%22HISTORY+%2F+Reference%22">HISTORY / Reference</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="ZK" term="%22REFERENCE+%2F+Atlases%2C+Gazetteers+%26+Maps%22">REFERENCE / Atlases, Gazetteers & Maps</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="ZK" term="%22TRAVEL+%2F+Essays+%26+Travelogues%22">TRAVEL / Essays & Travelogues</searchLink><br /><searchLink fieldCode="ZK" term="%22TRAVEL+%2F+Reference%22">TRAVEL / Reference</searchLink>
PLink https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&db=nlebk&AN=3026163
RecordInfo BibRecord:
  BibEntity:
    Classifications:
      – Code: 912.4
        Scheme: ddc
        Type: prePub
    Languages:
      – Code: eng
        Text: English
    Subjects:
      – SubjectFull: Early maps--Europe--History
        Type: general
      – SubjectFull: Cartography--Europe--History
        Type: general
    Titles:
      – TitleFull: Mapping Travel : The Origins and Conventions of Western Journey Maps
        Type: main
  BibRelationships:
    HasContributorRelationships:
      – PersonEntity:
          Name:
            NameFull: Jordana Dym
      – PersonEntity:
          Name:
            NameFull: Jordana Dym
    IsPartOfRelationships:
      – BibEntity:
          Dates:
            – D: 01
              M: 01
              Type: published
              Y: 2021
            – D: 05
              M: 12
              Type: profile
              Y: 2023
          Identifiers:
            – Type: isbn-print
              Value: 9789004499775
            – Type: isbn-electronic
              Value: 9789004499782
          Titles:
            – TitleFull: Mapping Travel : The Origins and Conventions of Western Journey Maps
              Type: main
ResultId 1