This poster details an ongoing and expanding undergraduate research collaboration between the fields of American literature and Geographic Information Sciences (GIS) to further refine and develop the field of literary cartography. Over the past few years, I have been collaborating with students and professors in IESA to elucidate the literary and pedagogical value of reading texts geographically. This research grows out of the recent spatial turn in the humanities, which draws on the ideas of theorists like Edward Soja to eschew historical understandings of the nation state in favor of more spatial conceptions of how culture and capital function across borders. To this effect, literary cartography and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) h...