Top Banner
Maps as Media Projecting Cultural Biases
24

Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Dec 29, 2021

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Maps as Media Projecting Cultural Biases

Page 2: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Maps and Bias •  Traditional paper maps are inherently biased because

we cannot accurately project a 3-D world onto paper

•  Maps are human creations, however people rarely question what they see on maps

•  Maps must generalize, symbolize and simplify complex information and interrelationships

“Maps are subject to distortions arising from ignorance, greed, ideological blindness or motive” Mark Monmonier

Page 3: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Maps can be biased… Based on their…

•  Projection

•  Cartographic convections (colours, symbols, titles etc.)

•  Messaging and purpose (intended or unintended)

Page 4: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Mercator Projection "   Developed in the

16th century

"   Great for navigation because all lines of longitude and latitude are the same

"   Continent shapes are realistic but size is inaccurate

Page 5: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Mercator Distortions:

"   Which is bigger Australia or Greenland?

•  On the map Greenland. In reality, Australia is three times larger!

"   As you move away from the equator the map becomes more stretched

AUSTRALIA

GREENLAND

Page 6: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Gall-Peters Projection

"   Created in the 1970s as an alternative to Mercator

"   Creator stated it was more neutral and less “racist” than Mercator

Page 7: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Gall-Peters Distortion "   Which is bigger Australia or

Greenland?

•  On this map Australia is bigger, nation sizes are closer to reality

"   However the shape of nations is distorted

"   This projection is often referred to as “hanging laundry”

GREENLAND

AUSTRALIA

Page 8: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Robinson Projection

"   Created in 1963

"   Purposely distorted to create a more pleasant appearance

Page 9: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Robinson Distortion: "   The most popular and

commonly used map projection

"   The major areas of distortions are at the poles

"   Still has a Eurocentric view of the world

Page 10: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Cultural Biases in Maps!

Taking a closer look...!

Page 11: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

An American Map!

❖  United States and the Western Hemisphere are central!

❖  Splits up Asia !

Page 12: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Projecting Bias: "The World from an “American” Perspective

Page 13: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 14: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

An Australian Map!

❖  Australia and the southern hemisphere are the centre rather than Europe and the western hemisphere

Page 15: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Toronto Centric Map!❖  Leonard Guelke created this

projection to show exactly how far any location on Earth is to or from Toronto

❖  By drawing a straight line on this map from Toronto to anywhere in the world and, with some simple math, you've got the real-world distance

❖  In order to achieve this benefit, you need to sacrifice some shapes and sizes

Page 16: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 17: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Maps tell stories

Page 18: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 19: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 20: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 21: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 22: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board
Page 23: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Your Task

•  With a partner, locate a visual of your choice (map, advertisement, photograph, infographic, comic) and explain how the visual can:

a) distort our view of reality and;

b) influence public opinion.

•  Submit your visual (or a link to it) and your response on Moodle so we can share our findings. Comment on one other students’ entry.

Page 24: Maps as Media - York Region District School Board

Alternative Task •  Locate a visual of your choice (map, advertisement, photograph, comic)

and explain how the visual can a) distort our view of reality and b) influence public opinion.

•  Submit your visual (or a link to it) and your response on Moodle so we can share our findings. Comment on one other students’ entry.

Moodle Forum Responses Should…

-  Identify what you agree and/or disagree with in the student’s response and why

-  Identify what you find interesting about their findings/analysis

-  Include 1-2 questions for the student for them to consider

-  Be constructive, offer new perspectives and make the student think “oh, I never thought of that…”

Moodle Forum Responses Should NOT…

-  Simply say “I agree with what you’re saying” or “this is a great point”

-  Re-state exactly what the student has already said.