The recent shift from representation to practice within map theorization has led to a renewed interest in mapmaking in terms of calling for both closer attention to the practices involved as well as the employment of ethnographic methodologies in researching how maps come to life. A deep understanding of the making of maps, however, requires a combination of different approaches, from the critical (text-oriented) to the ontogenetic (practice-oriented), from deconstruction to narrative ethnography, and from cultural contextual readings to subjects-centred readings. Two map scholars with very different backgrounds (phenomenology and political geography) seek to put these different approaches into action while investigating mapmaking through a...