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December 22, 2012

goodbye to the Mountains of Kong

RV-AJ171_MAPSID_G_20121221183726
As some may recall, it was not so long ago that we got around by using maps that folded. Occasionally, if we wanted a truly global picture of our place in the world, we would pull shoulder-dislocating atlases from shelves. The world was bigger back then. Experience and cheaper travel have rendered it small, but nothing has shrunk the world more than digital mapping. In medieval Christian Europe, Jerusalem was the center of the world, the ultimate end of a religious pilgrimage. If we lived in China, that focal point was Youzhou. Later, in the days of European empire, it might be Britain or France. Today, by contrast, each of us now stands as an individual at the center of our own map worlds. On our computers and phones, we plot a route not from A to B but from ourselves ("Allow current location") to anywhere of our choosing. Technology has enabled us to forget all about way-finding and geography. This is some change, and some loss. Maps have always related and realigned our history; increasingly, we're ceding control of that history to the cold precision of the computer.
more from Simon Garfield at the WSJ here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 11:08 AM | Permalink

Comments

It's amazing how quickly it all happens. Today a delivery van tossed a two inch thick paperback reference book in our driveway. I stared at it for a moment as I might have a letter addressed to my childhood self, then put it in the recycling. Material objects as reference sources are no more- like the mechanical computers of a generation ago.

Posted by: Jb | Dec 23, 2012 6:53:56 PM

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