Peripheral meaning in maps: The example of ideology

The basic function of a map is the intentional conveyance of information about a territory. Sign contents relating to other domains are peripheral to the said information and are therefore collectively called peripheral meaning. One kind of peripheral meaning, i.e., ideology, is the subject matter o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hansgeorg Schlichtmann
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: meta-carto-semiotics 2008-01-01
Series:Meta-Carto-Semiotics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://meta-carto-semiotics.org/uploads/mcs_vol1_2008/mcs_2008_1_schlichtmann.pdf
Description
Summary:The basic function of a map is the intentional conveyance of information about a territory. Sign contents relating to other domains are peripheral to the said information and are therefore collectively called peripheral meaning. One kind of peripheral meaning, i.e., ideology, is the subject matter of the present paper. At this place, "ideology" is a short term for beliefs about the socio-political component of the world. On the basis of observations gleaned from the cartographic literature, an attempt is made to place ideology into a semiotic frame. An ideological meaning component is considered a connotation which is often associated not with a single type of entries but a class of such types. Finally, the retrieval of ideological connotations in map interpretation is sketched.
ISSN:1868-1387