Re: [MapHist] Mapping Africa/Cartographier l'Afrique 2 - 3 December 2010]

2010-03-23 Thread Bruce Fetter

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
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Angie Cope wrote:
Many thanks, Angie. I've seen it. Bruce
This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to 
the whole list)

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From: Camille Lefebvre [camillelefeb...@yahoo.fr]
Date sent: 18 Mar 2010

Call For Paper:
Mapping Africa from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century
Construction, Transmission and Circulation of Cartographic Knowledge 
about Africa Europe, Arab world and Africa



Paris - December 2nd & 3rd 2010


Colonial mapping of Africa during 20th century has received much 
insightful attention but recent research invites us to overlook the 
western bias by considering knowledge construction in a global and 
interconnected perspective while re-inserting the chronology of the 
colonial moment in the longue durée. We will seek to develop a history 
of geographical and cartographic knowledge encompassing simultaneously 
European, Islamic and African productions and highlighting circulation 
of knowledge and practices between these different spaces. Rejecting the 
idea of westernization of the world undertaken through maps we wish to 
question knowledge and discourses about the representation of African 
spaces. The adopted timeframe makes a voluntary break with the 
institutional and political eras in order to understand African 
cartography as a process which would neither be restricted to the 
ancient cartographic image of a virgin continent inhabited by lions, nor 
limited to the image of a vacuum that colonial cartography would 
eventually fill. Medieval Western scholars inherited the concept of 
Africa from ancient authorities who considered it as the third part of 
the oikoumenē, lying in dreamt and dreaded horizons. Thus, our familiar 
notion of the African continent proceeds from a progressive intellectual 
construction stemming from the Middle-Ages. However, this story shall 
not be reduced to a positivist construction where linear progress 
originating from medieval cartography would ineluctably lead to an 
assumingly more scientific representation of space. Although African 
cartography evolved through empirical discoveries as the Portuguese 
navigations or through epistemological breakthrough as the rediscovery 
of Ptolemy’s “Geography”, it was also burdened by centuries-old 
scholarly traditions which proved difficult to re-consider in the light 
of experience. At the end of the nineteenth century, growing imperial 
cartography emptied African territories, allowing the Europeans to 
divide the continent in the name of a globally homogeneous space. 
Indeed, we seek to reveal these different graphic representations of the 
African continent oscillating between discovery and oblivion and between 
revelation and myth. Numerous authors, following the footsteps of J.B. 
Harley, analysed maps as instruments of power and stressed the symbolic 
dimension of mapping. Beyond this aspect, it seems epistemologically 
fundamental not to forget the material aspect of maps. We would like 
papers which will question mapping processes and which analyse 
techniques, knowledge and practices at the base of maps. One of the main 
aims of this conference will be to analyse in depth the construction and 
circulation of geographical knowledge between the different cultural 
areas. We invite paper submissions on transfers and circulation of 
cartographic practices and on the origin of geographical knowledge. We 
are interested in hearing from scholars who would study the 
heterogeneity of cartographic knowledge in maps originating from one or 
numerous cartographic traditions. We welcome papers, not only on the 
representation of the continent and transcontinental exchanges, but also 
on local or regional microhistory.
Abstracts of 300 words should be sent by 3 May 2010, in English or 
French, to Camille Lefebvre (CEMAf), Robin Seignobos (University of 
Paris I) and Vincent Hiribarren (University of Leeds), conference 
organizers to: cartographierlafri...@gmail.com


Cosponsored by the CEMAf http://www.cemaf.cnrs.fr/, the National Library 
of France (BNF http://www.bnf.fr/) and the French comittee of 
Cartography http://www.lecfc.fr/





Appel à contribution
Cartographier l’Afrique IXe-XIXe siècle
Construction, transmissions et circulations des savoirs cartographiques 
sur l’Afrique

Europe, monde arabe et Afrique


Paris - 2 et 3 décembre 2010


La mise en carte de l’Afrique par l’Europe dans le cadre de la 
domination coloniale est aujourd’hui une thématique en plein renouveau. 
Pourtant, les recherches récentes incitent à décentrer le regard en 
envisageant la construction des savoirs dans une perspective globale et 
interconnectée, en réévaluant la chronologie du moment colonial et en 
l’insérant dans une longue durée. Nous proposons don

[MapHist] Mapping Africa/Cartographier l'Afrique 2 - 3 December 2010]

2010-03-23 Thread Angie Cope

This is a MapHist list message (when you hit 'reply' you're replying to the 
whole list)
o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o + o +


From: Camille Lefebvre [camillelefeb...@yahoo.fr]
Date sent: 18 Mar 2010

Call For Paper: 


Mapping Africa from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century
Construction, Transmission and Circulation of Cartographic Knowledge about Africa 
Europe, Arab world and Africa



Paris - December 2nd & 3rd 2010


Colonial mapping of Africa during 20th century has received much insightful attention but recent research invites us to overlook the western bias by considering knowledge construction in a global and interconnected perspective while re-inserting the chronology of the colonial moment in the longue durée. We will seek to develop a history of geographical and cartographic knowledge encompassing simultaneously European, Islamic and African productions and highlighting circulation of knowledge and practices between these different spaces. Rejecting the idea of westernization of the world undertaken through maps we wish to question knowledge and discourses about the representation of African spaces. 
The adopted timeframe makes a voluntary break with the institutional and political eras in order to understand African cartography as a process which would neither be restricted to the ancient cartographic image of a virgin continent inhabited by lions, nor limited to the image of a vacuum that colonial cartography would eventually fill. Medieval Western scholars inherited the concept of Africa from ancient authorities who considered it as the third part of the oikoumenē, lying in dreamt and dreaded horizons. Thus, our familiar notion of the African continent proceeds from a progressive intellectual construction stemming from the Middle-Ages. However, this story shall not be reduced to a positivist construction where linear progress originating from medieval cartography would ineluctably lead to an assumingly more scientific representation of space. Although African cartography evolved through empirical discoveries as the Portuguese navigations or through epistemological breakthrough as the rediscovery of Ptolemy’s “Geography”, it was also burdened by centuries-old scholarly traditions which proved difficult to re-consider in the light of experience. At the end of the nineteenth century, growing imperial cartography emptied African territories, allowing the Europeans to divide the continent in the name of a globally homogeneous space. Indeed, we seek to reveal these different graphic representations of the African continent oscillating between discovery and oblivion and between revelation and myth. 
Numerous authors, following the footsteps of J.B. Harley, analysed maps as instruments of power and stressed the symbolic dimension of mapping. Beyond this aspect, it seems epistemologically fundamental not to forget the material aspect of maps. We would like papers which will question mapping processes and which analyse techniques, knowledge and practices at the base of maps. One of the main aims of this conference will be to analyse in depth the construction and circulation of geographical knowledge between the different cultural areas. We invite paper submissions on transfers and circulation of cartographic practices and on the origin of geographical knowledge. We are interested in hearing from scholars who would study the heterogeneity of cartographic knowledge in maps originating from one or numerous cartographic traditions. We welcome papers, not only on the representation of the continent and transcontinental exchanges, but also on local or regional microhistory. 


Abstracts of 300 words should be sent by 3 May 2010, in English or French, to 
Camille Lefebvre (CEMAf), Robin Seignobos (University of Paris I) and Vincent 
Hiribarren (University of Leeds), conference organizers to: 
cartographierlafri...@gmail.com

Cosponsored by the CEMAf http://www.cemaf.cnrs.fr/, the National Library of 
France (BNF http://www.bnf.fr/) and the French comittee of Cartography 
http://www.lecfc.fr/




Appel à contribution 


Cartographier l’Afrique IXe-XIXe siècle
Construction, transmissions et circulations des savoirs cartographiques sur 
l’Afrique
Europe, monde arabe et Afrique


Paris - 2 et 3 décembre 2010


La mise en carte de l’Afrique par l’Europe dans le cadre de la domination coloniale est aujourd’hui une thématique en plein renouveau. Pourtant, les recherches récentes incitent à décentrer le regard en envisageant la construction des savoirs dans une perspective globale et interconnectée, en réévaluant la chronologie du moment colonial et en l’insérant dans une longue durée. Nous proposons donc de développer une histoire des savoirs géographiques et cartographiques qui englobe dans un même mouvement les productions européennes, arabo-musulmanes et africaines et qui s’intéresse à la circulation des savoirs et des pratiques entre ces différents espaces. Rejetant le g