Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands

The article examines the communication possibilities of early modern maps as historical sources within the methodological frame of imagology and constructionist theory. A comparative analysis reveals numerous visualisations or images of the Other, which depend not only on the author’s cartographic s...

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Main Authors: Snježana Gregurović, Dubravka Mlinarić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies 2011-12-01
Series:Migracijske i etničke teme
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/115921
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author Snježana Gregurović
Dubravka Mlinarić
author_facet Snježana Gregurović
Dubravka Mlinarić
author_sort Snježana Gregurović
collection DOAJ
description The article examines the communication possibilities of early modern maps as historical sources within the methodological frame of imagology and constructionist theory. A comparative analysis reveals numerous visualisations or images of the Other, which depend not only on the author’s cartographic skills, the selection of the offered information and applied cartographic code, but also on the Habsburg, the Venetian or the Ottoman imperial strategic and cartographic policies on the multiple borderlands of early modern Croatia. Due to their highly suggestive nature, maps were easily used for interpretation and even manipulation with geographic, ideological, confessional, cultural and even linguistic images and denotations. The Other was not always illuminated as being different on the other side of the border, but also as diversity “among us”. Through the whole panoply of complex images of the Other, some of them imposed by a certain imperial power, European as well as Croatian cartographers have created a structured and hierarchical approach to cartography and mapping of the Other. Contemporary rereading of these sources requires a good understanding of the circumstances in which an individual map was made, but also a critical approach not only to sources but to interpretative patterns as well. In the end, it is necessary to compare the map in question with a a complementary source from the “Other side” in order to bridge the gap and remake the existing mental maps, adding intercultural competence aimed at getting to know better the Other.
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spelling doaj.art-50538a36a75e424ab71f6139803d97e72024-03-02T13:30:13ZengInstitute for Migration and Ethnic StudiesMigracijske i etničke teme1333-25461848-91842011-12-01273345373Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple BorderlandsSnježana Gregurović0Dubravka Mlinarić1Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies, Zagreb, CroatiaInstitute for Migration and Ethnic Studies, Zagreb, CroatiaThe article examines the communication possibilities of early modern maps as historical sources within the methodological frame of imagology and constructionist theory. A comparative analysis reveals numerous visualisations or images of the Other, which depend not only on the author’s cartographic skills, the selection of the offered information and applied cartographic code, but also on the Habsburg, the Venetian or the Ottoman imperial strategic and cartographic policies on the multiple borderlands of early modern Croatia. Due to their highly suggestive nature, maps were easily used for interpretation and even manipulation with geographic, ideological, confessional, cultural and even linguistic images and denotations. The Other was not always illuminated as being different on the other side of the border, but also as diversity “among us”. Through the whole panoply of complex images of the Other, some of them imposed by a certain imperial power, European as well as Croatian cartographers have created a structured and hierarchical approach to cartography and mapping of the Other. Contemporary rereading of these sources requires a good understanding of the circumstances in which an individual map was made, but also a critical approach not only to sources but to interpretative patterns as well. In the end, it is necessary to compare the map in question with a a complementary source from the “Other side” in order to bridge the gap and remake the existing mental maps, adding intercultural competence aimed at getting to know better the Other.http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/115921mapimageimagologythe Othermultiple borderlands
spellingShingle Snježana Gregurović
Dubravka Mlinarić
Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
Migracijske i etničke teme
map
image
imagology
the Other
multiple borderlands
title Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
title_full Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
title_fullStr Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
title_full_unstemmed Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
title_short Cartographic Visualisation and the Image of the Other in the Example of Multiple Borderlands
title_sort cartographic visualisation and the image of the other in the example of multiple borderlands
topic map
image
imagology
the Other
multiple borderlands
url http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/115921
work_keys_str_mv AT snjezanagregurovic cartographicvisualisationandtheimageoftheotherintheexampleofmultipleborderlands
AT dubravkamlinaric cartographicvisualisationandtheimageoftheotherintheexampleofmultipleborderlands