READINGS
We’ll be building a more comprehensive reading list based on participants’ interests, but in the mean time, here are some works on digital mapping:
- Anne-Kathrin Reuschel and Lorenz Hurni. “Mapping Literature: Visualisation of Spatial Uncertainty in Fiction” in The Cartographic Journal Vol. 48 No. 4 (2011)
- Jo Guldi. “What is the Spatial Turn” in Spatial Humanities
- Jason Farman. “Mapping the Digital Empire: Google Earth and the process of postmodern cartography” in New Media & Society
- “Where: Geospatial Data” IVMOOC video
- Seth Long. “Digital Maps and Social Data”
- Bethany Nowviskie. “Neatline and visualization as interpretation”
- Martin Dodge and Rob Kitchin. “Exposing the ‘Second Text’ of Maps of the Net” in Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
- “Photogrammetric documentation of an archaeological site (Palpa, Peru) using an autonomous model helicopter”
SAMPLE PROJECTS
- Neatline Demos
- Geographic Smell Maps
- Charles Cumming. “The 21 Steps”
- Slave Revolt in Jamaica, 1760-61.
- A literary map of London
- Hypercities
- A Google street view of Diagon Alley and similarly Google street view of the Pyramids
- Sounds of Street View – and how to make your own Sound of Street View
- Photogrammar
- Visualizing Emancipation
- Mapping the Republic of Letters
- The Spread of U.S. Slavery, 1790–1860
- ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World
- Under Lake Norman
- The Atlas of Early Printing
- Caribbean Cholera Map
- WorldMap
TOOLS
- Here are two mapping/ storytelling resources that Katie W. thought others might enjoy:
http://storymap.knightlab.com/
http://timeline.knightlab.com/
These web apps can’t hold as much detail/ as many layers as Omeka, but they are far less daunting and may be more appropriate for small class projects. - This new tool has just come across Anelise’s radar: http://0media.tw/t/geoevent/
For mapping events in space and time.
TUTORIALS
- Here is a tutorial Suzanne W. found helpful: Neatline Tutorial