본문

서브메뉴

Misreading Maps: Maps and the British Novel in the Age of the Ordnance Survey- [electronic resource]
내용보기
Misreading Maps: Maps and the British Novel in the Age of the Ordnance Survey- [electronic resource]
자료유형  
 학위논문
Control Number  
0016933654
International Standard Book Number  
9798379565305
Dewey Decimal Classification Number  
800
Main Entry-Personal Name  
Van Cleve, Sarah R.
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint  
[S.l.] : University of Michigan., 2023
Publication, Distribution, etc. (Imprint  
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2023
Physical Description  
1 online resource(288 p.)
General Note  
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-12, Section: A.
General Note  
Advisor: Pinch, Adela.
Dissertation Note  
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Michigan, 2023.
Restrictions on Access Note  
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Restrictions on Access Note  
This item must not be added to any third party search indexes.
Summary, Etc.  
요약Misreading Maps: Maps and the British Novel in the Age of the Ordnance Survey contributes to a new account of what happened to the British novel in the years spanning from the inspiration of Britain's first comprehensive national mapping project in 1747, to the production of the "First Series" maps between 1791 and 1870, to its immediate aftermath in the late nineteenth century. The project unsettles and recalibrates claims for the similarities between novels and maps that emerged during the spatial turn in the humanities and the critical cartography movement in map studies, uncovering instead how maps and novels were both in dialogue and trending in different directions.Part One examines two approaches to topography by nineteenth-century British mapmakers and novelists. Chapter One turns away from the achievements of the much-celebrated Trigonometrical Survey and toward the downstream consequences that trigonometry produced in the latter stages of the mapmaking process; it argues that mapmakers considered topographical work to be more difficult, and less important, than trigonometrical work. Chapter Two shifts from map production by the Ordnance Survey to map consumption by literary characters who treat maps as inadequate for representing place. Characters in Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy, Tobias Smollett's The Expedition of Humphry Clinker, Jane Austen's Mansfield Park, Charles Dickens's David Copperfield, Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South, and George Eliot's Middlemarch do not understand maps as systems because they are preoccupied with the presence of individual bodies. Though they are ridiculed and underestimated for their inability to read maps, these characters tap into an affective sense of place that grasps locality without relying on borders, abstractions, or data points.Part Two turns to the treatment of islands on maps and in novels. Chapter Three theorizes islands as terraqueous spaces, combining land and sea, where the water at an island's edge is part of the island's identity. Drawing upon Ordnance Survey practices, William Wordsworth's poetry, and Daniel Defoe's map of Robinson Crusoe, it shows that terraqueous space is an obstacle to mapmaking. In contrast, the island's geology shapes the novel's sociality, allowing the novel to deftly navigate the porous boundary between being alone and being social. Chapter Four transitions from the fictional islands of Robinson Crusoe's female successors to representations of the Isle of Wight produced by mapmakers like Isaac Dalby (1744-1824), homeowners like Queen Victoria (1819-1901) and Poet Laureate Alfred Tennyson (1809-1892), and novelists like Fanny Burney (1752-1840) and Elizabeth Gaskell (1810-1865). Whereas mapmakers and homeowners erase some of the messiness of lived experience, novels representing the Isle of Wight capture the feeling of being out of place that is the antithesis of mapping but also, and paradoxically, the way that we experience place when reading novels.Part Three, which contains Chapter Five, turns to the late nineteenth-century maps made by Anthony Trollope (1815-1882), Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894), and Thomas Hardy (1840-1928). The chapter focuses on co-construction and collaboration between readers and authors, readers and characters, and characters with other characters. When embedded in a social context instead of a vacuum, map misreading becomes a valuable way of knowing and an avenue toward building social connection. Focusing on the ways that maps circulate in and around novels, this chapter offers a guide to readers for negotiating the insides and outsides of books.
Subject Added Entry-Topical Term  
Literature.
Subject Added Entry-Topical Term  
British & Irish literature.
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
British novel
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Ordnance Survey
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Topography
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Isle of Wight
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Fictional islands
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Barchester
Index Term-Uncontrolled  
Treasure Island
Added Entry-Corporate Name  
University of Michigan English Language & Literature
Host Item Entry  
Dissertations Abstracts International. 84-12A.
Host Item Entry  
Dissertation Abstract International
Electronic Location and Access  
로그인을 한후 보실 수 있는 자료입니다.
Control Number  
joongbu:643708
신착도서 더보기
최근 3년간 통계입니다.

소장정보

  • 예약
  • 캠퍼스간 도서대출
  • 서가에 없는 책 신고
  • 나의폴더
소장자료
등록번호 청구기호 소장처 대출가능여부 대출정보
TQ0029609 T   원문자료 열람가능/출력가능 열람가능/출력가능
마이폴더 부재도서신고

* 대출중인 자료에 한하여 예약이 가능합니다. 예약을 원하시면 예약버튼을 클릭하십시오.

해당 도서를 다른 이용자가 함께 대출한 도서

관련도서

관련 인기도서

도서위치