The map of Israel/Palestine has long been used by both Israelis and Palestinians, from their unequal power positions, as a celebrated national symbol. It is virtually the same map, depicting a sliver-shaped land between River Jordan and the Mediterranean, two overlapping homelands in one territory. Thus, a single geo-body appears to contain two antagonistic and asymmetrical nations, locked in a bitter struggle. The article interprets the uncanny mirror-maps of Israel/Palestine by drawing on recent work in critical cartography. One approach has read maps as rhetorical claims for power and over territory; indeed, the mirror-maps of Israel/Palestine are often read as indications of maximalist territorial ambitions and hidden wishes to “wipe th...
The relationship between cartography and law provides a unique focus through which to examine mixed ...
The (re)attribution of place names plays a significant yet subtle role in the production of spatial ...
Originally, the “Israeli experience” was born from the womb of the Holy Land, even when the “childre...
The map of Israel/Palestine has long been used by both Israelis and Palestinians, from their unequal...
Shortly after the June 1967 War, in which Israel seized vast territories beyond its borders, the Isr...
Debates on the Israel-Palestinian conflict abound. Insofar as these discussions focus on what peace ...
The research methods of hermeneutics and semiotics were used to analyze maps of the Holy Land. The m...
This paper questions Geographers ability to think about power and violence through different epistem...
Maps are considered to be an ultimate expression of modernity. Empirical cartography plays a central...
In the broiling climate that is the landscape of Palestine-Israel the familiar discourse is one of i...
Cartography, place-naming and state-sponsored explorations were central to the modern European conqu...
In this doctoral project I examine lineages of imaging in Palestine, and more specifically Jerusalem...
There Is No Map is a body of work that contributes to an ongoing investigation of the Israeli occupa...
One hundred and one current maps of Israel were analysed for their modern mapping religious ele-ment...
The Palestinian region is changing rapidly, with both economic and cultural consequences. One way of...
The relationship between cartography and law provides a unique focus through which to examine mixed ...
The (re)attribution of place names plays a significant yet subtle role in the production of spatial ...
Originally, the “Israeli experience” was born from the womb of the Holy Land, even when the “childre...
The map of Israel/Palestine has long been used by both Israelis and Palestinians, from their unequal...
Shortly after the June 1967 War, in which Israel seized vast territories beyond its borders, the Isr...
Debates on the Israel-Palestinian conflict abound. Insofar as these discussions focus on what peace ...
The research methods of hermeneutics and semiotics were used to analyze maps of the Holy Land. The m...
This paper questions Geographers ability to think about power and violence through different epistem...
Maps are considered to be an ultimate expression of modernity. Empirical cartography plays a central...
In the broiling climate that is the landscape of Palestine-Israel the familiar discourse is one of i...
Cartography, place-naming and state-sponsored explorations were central to the modern European conqu...
In this doctoral project I examine lineages of imaging in Palestine, and more specifically Jerusalem...
There Is No Map is a body of work that contributes to an ongoing investigation of the Israeli occupa...
One hundred and one current maps of Israel were analysed for their modern mapping religious ele-ment...
The Palestinian region is changing rapidly, with both economic and cultural consequences. One way of...
The relationship between cartography and law provides a unique focus through which to examine mixed ...
The (re)attribution of place names plays a significant yet subtle role in the production of spatial ...
Originally, the “Israeli experience” was born from the womb of the Holy Land, even when the “childre...