This paper provides a brief introduction to critical cartography. We define
critical cartography as a one-two punch of new mapping practices and theoretical
critique. Critical cartography challenges academic cartography by linking
geographic knowledge with power, and thus is political. Although contemporary
critical cartography rose to prominence in the 1990s, we argue that it can only be
understood in the historical context of the development of the cartographic
discipline more generally. We sketch some of the history of this development, and
show that critiques have continually accompanied the discipline. In the post-war
period cartography underwent a significant solidification as a science, while at the
same time other mapping practices (particularly artistic experimentation with
spatial representation) were occurring. Coupled with the resurgence of theoretical
critiques during the 1990s, these developments serve to question the relevance of the discipline of cartography at a time when mapping is increasingly prevalent and
vital.
Fil: Crampton, Jeremy W. .Department of Geography, Georgia State University, Estados Unidos.
Fil: Krygier, John. Geography and Geography, Ohio Wesleyan University, Estados Unidos.