My dissertation investigates an unexamined issue in literary studies---the role of maps in modernist literature. As modernist writers searched for ways to express changing and sometimes contradictory perspectives on physical and mental experiences, they repeatedly turned to maps as both authoritative and problematic forms of representation and navigation. I argue that these maps---whether they appear as images described in the text, the subject of a poem's meditations, or actual sketches included in a book---act as interpretive nodes that allow insight into an issue central to much early twentieth-century literature: the orientation of the modern subject. Literature's turn to cartography can be seen as part of a formal project to explore an...