In recent years, the terms “mapping” and “cartography” have been used with increasing frequency to describe literature engaged with place. The limitation of much of this scholarship its failure to investigate how maps themselves operate—how they establish relationships and organize knowledge. In this document, I offer a rigorous examination of the structural and epistemological parallels between the fields of poetics and cartography. I argue that William Carlos Williams, Elizabeth Bishop, and Robert Hass can rightly be named cartographic poets, not only because they are invested in places, nor because they write evocatively about maps, but because, while maintaining the commitments to order and analogy long associated with both poetr...
For Charles Olson, places represent an ideal foundation for his poetry in so far as they free it fro...
As Brian Harley wrote: \u201cmaps are too important to be left to cartographers alone\u201d (2001: 2...
Given the long history of map-making and its scientific and scholarly traditions one might expect t...
In recent years, the terms “mapping” and “cartography” have been used with increasing frequency to ...
This article offers a selection of notable American poems about maps and grapples with their place i...
New Year’s Eve of 1934 found Elizabeth Bishop recuperating from the flu. Out of her isolation, the r...
This paper is about poems shaped like maps. It presents a brief history of visual poetry, beginning ...
Maps, recent cultural geographers are fond of reminding us, are products of the specific ideology fr...
“Cartographers as Critics: Staking Claims in the Mapping of American Literature” recuperates the pri...
This paper focuses upon four twentieth-century poets who write about maps. Spanning three generation...
My dissertation investigates an unexamined issue in literary studies---the role of maps in modernist...
This paper will try to cover the ways in which Elizabeth Bishop’s writings would be connected to car...
This interdisciplinary issue on “The Cartographic Imagination: Art, Literature and Mapping in the Un...
The long superficial engagement of literary scholars with the cartographic lexicon (under the label ...
African-American poet Gloria Oden was among those inspired by Elizabeth Bishop’s seminal poem “The M...
For Charles Olson, places represent an ideal foundation for his poetry in so far as they free it fro...
As Brian Harley wrote: \u201cmaps are too important to be left to cartographers alone\u201d (2001: 2...
Given the long history of map-making and its scientific and scholarly traditions one might expect t...
In recent years, the terms “mapping” and “cartography” have been used with increasing frequency to ...
This article offers a selection of notable American poems about maps and grapples with their place i...
New Year’s Eve of 1934 found Elizabeth Bishop recuperating from the flu. Out of her isolation, the r...
This paper is about poems shaped like maps. It presents a brief history of visual poetry, beginning ...
Maps, recent cultural geographers are fond of reminding us, are products of the specific ideology fr...
“Cartographers as Critics: Staking Claims in the Mapping of American Literature” recuperates the pri...
This paper focuses upon four twentieth-century poets who write about maps. Spanning three generation...
My dissertation investigates an unexamined issue in literary studies---the role of maps in modernist...
This paper will try to cover the ways in which Elizabeth Bishop’s writings would be connected to car...
This interdisciplinary issue on “The Cartographic Imagination: Art, Literature and Mapping in the Un...
The long superficial engagement of literary scholars with the cartographic lexicon (under the label ...
African-American poet Gloria Oden was among those inspired by Elizabeth Bishop’s seminal poem “The M...
For Charles Olson, places represent an ideal foundation for his poetry in so far as they free it fro...
As Brian Harley wrote: \u201cmaps are too important to be left to cartographers alone\u201d (2001: 2...
Given the long history of map-making and its scientific and scholarly traditions one might expect t...