| Tim Ingold - 2000 - 488 pages
...itineraries that contributed to its production (Turnbull 1996: 62). In the words of Michel de Certeau, 'the map, a totalising stage on which elements of...which it is the result or the necessary condition' (1984: 121). Just as science, in the official view, is charged with the task of integrating site-specific... | |
| Susan L. Roberson - 2001 - 338 pages
...and conditioning the second, makes it possible to move from one to the other. The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a “state” of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its... | |
| Andrew Ballantyne - 2002 - 218 pages
...and conditioning the second, makes it possible to move from one to the other. The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a “state” of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its... | |
| Michel de Certeau - 1984 - 260 pages
...and conditioning the second, makes it possible to move from one to the other. The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a "state" of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its posterity,... | |
| Andrew Ballantyne - 2002 - 224 pages
...and conditioning the second, makes it possible to move from one to the other. The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a "state" of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its posterity,... | |
| Charles Burdett, Derek Duncan - 2002 - 228 pages
...practices of subjects that have produced and observed the very spaces initially: The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a 'state' of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its posterity,... | |
| Charles Burdett, Derek Duncan - 2002 - 234 pages
...practices of subjects that have produced and observed the very spaces initially: The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a 'state' of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its posterity,... | |
| Jeffrey N. Peters - 2004 - 294 pages
...to disappear in the seventeenth century) — by which it is preconditioned: “The map, a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a ‘state' of geographical knowledge, pushes away into its prehistory or into its posterity,... | |
| Julie A. Buckler - 2005 - 396 pages
...possibility." The map thus constitutes space as "a formal ensemble of abstract places" and "a totalizing stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a 'state' of geographical knowledge." See de Certeau, pp. 119-21. 30. Tom Conley, The... | |
| Alison Findlay - 2006 - 210 pages
...contingency or sense of 'process' that De Certeau argues is eliminated in early modern maps. He sees maps as 'a totalising stage on which elements of diverse origin are brought together to form the tableau of a "state" of knowledge', but complains that they are guilty of pushing offstage the... | |
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