Contains fulltext : 149366.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Ever since the 15th century, empires have invented Europe as a meaningful political space to legitimize territorial ambitions and establish hierarchies between Europeans and professedly lesser geocultural entities. Maps have played a crucial role in naturalizing the geopolitical arbitrariness—what we term cartopolitics—that has underlain such Europeanization. In this article, we draw on historical maps to expose the cartopolitical cleansing done by the EU—today's grand Europeanizing power—and free Europe from its hegemonic cartopolitical inscription. Heavy on symbolism yet light on mathematical accuracy, old maps of Europe readily earn our mistrust. Meanw...
How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization, defined by a wide v...
In Continent by Default, Anne Marie Le Gloannec, a distinguished analyst of contemporary Europe, con...
To map is to take a measure of the world, to take the shifting complexity and liveliness of society ...
Item does not contain fulltextEver since the 15th century, empires have invented Europe as a meaning...
Ever since the 15th century, empires have invented Europe as a meaningful political space to legitim...
While cartography, historically, is a privileged instrument of thought, imagination, research and pr...
In contrast to recent reinforcements of Europe's internal and external borders due to the refugee si...
This volume seeks to collectively explore how maps can be used to understand the making of European ...
Following the voyages of Christopher Columbus, John Cabot, Alonso de Ojeda and Amerigo Vespucci in t...
PhD ThesisThis thesis examines the unclear political nature of the European Union and current academ...
Maps help people find their way in both a real and a metaphorical sense. Material maps are flanked b...
For researchers and students of International Relations (IR), one date looms larger than all others:...
At the end of the 18th century, empress Maria-Theresa of the Habsburg Empire commissioned a large-sc...
School geography makes a leading contribution to construct the concept of Europe. In a geopolitical ...
Should we conceive of Europe as a collection of individual states or as a group of distinct cities a...
How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization, defined by a wide v...
In Continent by Default, Anne Marie Le Gloannec, a distinguished analyst of contemporary Europe, con...
To map is to take a measure of the world, to take the shifting complexity and liveliness of society ...
Item does not contain fulltextEver since the 15th century, empires have invented Europe as a meaning...
Ever since the 15th century, empires have invented Europe as a meaningful political space to legitim...
While cartography, historically, is a privileged instrument of thought, imagination, research and pr...
In contrast to recent reinforcements of Europe's internal and external borders due to the refugee si...
This volume seeks to collectively explore how maps can be used to understand the making of European ...
Following the voyages of Christopher Columbus, John Cabot, Alonso de Ojeda and Amerigo Vespucci in t...
PhD ThesisThis thesis examines the unclear political nature of the European Union and current academ...
Maps help people find their way in both a real and a metaphorical sense. Material maps are flanked b...
For researchers and students of International Relations (IR), one date looms larger than all others:...
At the end of the 18th century, empress Maria-Theresa of the Habsburg Empire commissioned a large-sc...
School geography makes a leading contribution to construct the concept of Europe. In a geopolitical ...
Should we conceive of Europe as a collection of individual states or as a group of distinct cities a...
How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization, defined by a wide v...
In Continent by Default, Anne Marie Le Gloannec, a distinguished analyst of contemporary Europe, con...
To map is to take a measure of the world, to take the shifting complexity and liveliness of society ...