Title: critical analysis of cyberspace mapping
1critical analysis of cyberspace mapping
martin dodge, casa seminar, 3rd July 2002
the map is a help provided to the imagination
through the eyes. Henri Abraham Chatelain, Atlas
Historique (1705)
2what have I been doing for the last few years??
Oct. 2001
Phd
cybergeography
Thesis
1996
Sept. 2000
2002?
aims - coherent, valuable and academically
credible analysis
3understanding cyberspace?
- there are many ways to describe and understand
cyberspace - economics, legal, mathematics, art, sociology,
etc.. - Im a geographer, so I believe maps enjoy a
privileged position - maps have been powerful visual tools for
understanding the world for 1000s of years - maps have been key in framing our understanding
places, their size, shape and the relations
between them - maps have been vital for navigation
- maps vital in war, commerce and government
4defining cyberspace mapping?
- cyberspace
- the conceptual spaces of information and
communications flows within the digital
infrastructure of computing hardware, software
code and high-speed telecommunications networks - it is not the technology or infrastructure
itself, but the virtual spaces that this enables - map and mapping
- maps are graphic representations that facilitate
a spatial understanding of things, concepts,
conditions, processes, or events in the human
world - (Harley and Woodward, History of Cartography,
Volume 1, 1987)
5defining cyberspace mapping?
- cyberspace mapping concerned with maps that show
some aspect of ICT infrastructure or conceptual
digital information spaces - maps of cyberspace, not maps in cyberspace
- my framing of the domain of cyberspace mapping is
obviously somewhat artificial - cyberspace mapping being done by lots of
different people, groups and organisations. not
conventional cartography or GI industry
6but can we really map cyberspace?
- a common question, based on 2 misconceptions
- maps have to be geographical
- cyberspace is non-spatial and separate from
geography - challenge the death of distance notions
- mapping is much wider than the OS, Times Atlas
and A-Z street maps - why is it hard to do?
- cyberspace is new, its rapidly evolving, its
fluid and its diverse. a lot of it is
(increasingly) private space - breaks Euclidean conventions
- we have very few good examples!
- but its still early days
7what are cyberspace maps like?
- difficult to generalise.
- many graphical forms and many aspects of
cyberspace to map - modes of interaction
- lots of scope for innovation
- there is no one true map of cyberspace
- I dont attempt a full catalogue here - see the
Atlas of Cyberspace website and book!
8why map cyberspace?
- why are these maps interesting and significant?
- maps of cyberspace are important because they can
tell us things about cyberspace - and cyberspace is becoming increasingly important
in our lives - the human desire to explore the unknown
- cyberspace is one of the most significant terra
incognita of the 21st century - revealing what is hidden. making the invisible
visible. enhancing our understanding - maps as a census of cyberspace. feeding into
government policy and business decisions
9why map cyberspace?
- maps shape our perception and knowledge of
cyberspace. maps frame space - maps also tell us things about the people who
made them, and how they view cyberspace - power, money and control
- property maps of cyberspace
- what you can see, you can control and exploit
- cartography redux
- increasingly our lives involve visual, CMC,
screen-based interaction. who controls the
geography of the screen?
10why map cyberspace?
- people are making the maps regardless, so need to
get in there and analyse them - the maps are being used to make important
decisions, regardless of their efficacy or ethics
- these are early maps, but like a lot of
technology, the first map can set the boundaries
of the possible going forward - got to get your critique in early before it all
become set
11defining critical analysis?
- critical and not criticism
- not a value judgement critique (I like that
map!) - not a technical evaluation and usability test
- critical geography
- critical cartography
- a kind of deconstruction
- destabilise the objective truth claims of a text
- I dont like the jargon and the baggage though
- linking into Ground Truth. but I am critiquing
the maps and not whole systems
12my theoretical position
- critical theory as a combination of
- social constructivism
- political economy
- I think they provide good theoretical tools for
understanding cyberspace - maps and cyberspace are socially constructed
- maps and cyberspace produced within power
structures of capitalism - (e.g. why dont we all have broadband?)
- applied through ideas of critical cartography
13theory of critical cartography
- development of critical cartography in the last
15 years or so - the 2nd text of maps
- social and political contexts of maps and the map
makers - key scholars
- JB Harley, Deconstructing the map (1989)
- Denis Wood, The power of maps (1992)
- Jeremy Black, Maps and politics (1997)
- Jeremy Crampton, Maps as social constructions
power, communication and visualization (2001) - Paul Laxton, New nature of maps (2001)
14critical cartographer
- Brian Harley
- rather than accepting what cartographers tell us
maps are supposed to be, the thrust of my
deconstruction is to subvert the apparent
naturalness and innocence of the world shown in
maps both past and present - break the assumed link between reality and
representation
15critical cartographythe new nature of the map
- the power of maps
- maps are not simply about communicating
geographic information or representing the
landscape - maps express power maps create power
- maps are not neutral or objective
- maps are systems of power-knowledge
- maps are subjective, selective distortions
- maps serve the interests of those that make them
16critical cartographythe new nature of the map
- maps can be read as texts, concerned for the
2nd text, the marginal, the unsaid - we should worry less about map design, accuracy
standards, theories of information transfer, etc,
etc (thats a smoke screen) - examine more the social implications
- what are the ethics of the maps, the map-maker
and their mapping practices - is it ethical to record and map someones web
surfing and email interactions?
17two key ideas
- maps are subjective
- maps are frames
18maps are subjective
- we all know the huge number of subjective
decisions we take when making maps - just think of the last time you did some analysis
(manipulation) and mapping in ArcView. trace out
the number of subjective, and often arbitrary,
decisions you make - (why 4 classes instead of 8?)
- plus all the arbitrary defaults set by ESRI
programmers - these all effect the end result. what comes out
of ArcView is your social construction
19- this is the same for even the most fancy 3d
immersive cyberspace map - this applies to all visualisations
20maps are subjective
- subjectivity is inherent
- subjectivity is not wrong. you are not a bad
person for making subjective maps. not a personal
criticism - the problem is
- passing off the map as objective and neutral
- denying the subjectivity
- naïve belief that the map is just a mirror of
reality - this is enhanced with the scientific
sophistication and hiding behind layers gee whiz
tech - maps are then used and applied on the assumption
that they are objective
21distortion and deceptionhow to lie with maps
- most obvious being through
- data selection/omission
- projections
- how are maps of cyberspace
- deceiving?
- Clearly there are many ways
- to project cyberspace onto a map
22maps as frames of space
23interfaces as frames of virtual space
24virtual maps make virtual space
- the map affects what we see and what we can do
- we never know virtual space for real
- the interface is the space
- map and the territory are one
- those who make the interface, make the space
- and of course the map they make is subjective and
serves their interests - its easy to take the interface for granted,
assuming it is natural and a given. do not
recognise its artificiality
25global political economy
- power - interests - consumption - closure
local social constructivist
- authorship - objectives - contexts
the map
- subject - rhetoric - accuracy - ethics - space
methodology for critique
26- global
- Power What are the economic structures in which
the map is situated? - Consumption How is the map presented,
disseminated, and used? How does the map work as
part of wider cyberspace discourses and how is it
received by society? - Interests What interests are served by making
this map? Who wins and who looses? Where does
power lie in the production of this map? - Closure What maps were not made? How does this
map foreclose other representations and
opportunities? What other mappings have been
undertaken or alternative mappings could be
imagined?
27- local
- Authorship What is the authorship of the map?
Who is doing the showing and what are their
explicit and implicit intentions? What is the
relationship between the map and its author? - Objectives Why was the map made? Are the
objectives of the map stated explicitly? What are
some possible secondary, implicit objectives? - Contexts What are the institutional contexts of
the map? Who pays for the map to be made? What
necessary practices and technical infrastructure
was required to make the map? What are some of
the major social and cultural inspirations and
influences on the map?
28- the map
- Subject What is the subject of the map? What is
shown and what is not shown? - Rhetoric How is power encoded and expressed in
both the content and graphical form of the map?
What conventions underlie the graphical symbols
employed on the map? - Accuracy How accurate is the map? What are its
standards of accuracy? Is it a workable map? - Space What is the scale of the map? What
conception of space is the map based upon? What
is the maps worldview? - Ethics Is it an ethical map? What are the wider
social, political and economic implications on
the space being mapped? How might the map change
nature and perceptions of the space that it maps?
29My critique methodology???
- I have struggled on this bit
- easy to say, harder to do
- welcome your thoughts and suggestions
- need to limit the questions and lines of enquiry
- need a structure to avoid rambling discussions
where everything matters - not sure how well the questions follow the theory
(esp. for political economy) - I will see what results come out
- application of critique methodology to 12 case
studies
30next step - which maps to critique?
- Cant critique them all. (In current Atlas there
are 256 different cyberspace mapping projects) - divide cyberspace mapping into 3 scales
infrastructure, information, social - 4 case studies at each scale
- the case studies were selected before the
critique methodology was drawn up - but clearly self-selected and not unbiased
- chose case studies where I could say interesting
things! - easier for geographic maps? can apply to all?
31Social spaces
Information spaces
Infrastructure
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37structure of the thesis
- Introduction
- 1. Mapping historical context and critical
theory - 2. Cyberspace historical context and critical
theory - 3. Developing a critical theory of cyberspace
mapping - 4. Critical analysis of Internet infrastructure
mapping - 5. Critical analysis of information
spatializations - 6. Critical analysis of mapping online social
spaces - 7. Reflecting on the Atlas of Cyberspace
- Conclusions
38critics of critical cartography
- too polemical
- too many generalisation
- not all mapping is hegemonic. there is space for
alternative mapping - seeking to re-envision cartography fitting their
subjective views of the world - end up in a position where everything count
- knocking down and not building up
- does not help making better maps
- it is, of course, only one route to analyse
cyberspace mapping