Bernard Debarbieux

The Politics of Mapping


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as well as free software. However, the political effects of this investment have not always been what one might expect. For example, the OpenStreetMap (OSM) free maps, produced by thousands of volunteers, have now become a reference for political authorities, especially municipalities in France, whose data from official maps are generally not as up-to-date as those from the OSM.

      I.2.2. From domination to resistance strategies

      The “power of maps” has thus shifted from the sole issue of domination and hegemony to the more general question of power relationships and strategies of resistance, supported by maps or geographic information. Here again, the limitations of the framework of thought proposed by Harley, whose approach was essentially state-centric, neglecting alternative expressions of mapping opposing hegemonic forms of power, may be noted (Crampton 2001, p. 236; Dodge and Perkins 2015; Gautreau and Noucher, Chapter 3 of this book). Indeed, in 1988, Harley (1988a) wrote: “The social history of maps, unlike that of literature, art, or music, appears to have few genuinely popular, alternative, or subversive modes of expression. Maps are pre-eminently a language of power, not of protest” (p. 301). But perhaps Harley died too soon (1991) to observe the proliferation of protest mapping practices, which, although existing for several decades, only really took off in the 1990s. As a historian, moreover, observing social reality “in the making” was not his primary object of study.

      The same spirit can be found in the comic book writer Joaquín Salvador Lavado’s work, known as “QUINO”: his main character Mafalda, who became a cult in Argentina, and whose stories were published between 1963 and 1974, has a very critical and pessimistic view of society and the state of the world. In an excerpt from the comic strip, the little girl looks at a globe with astonishment, discovering that the inhabitants of the Southern Hemisphere live upside down. Drawing parallels between cartographic representations and the epistemological domination of the South by the North, she concludes that “Since we are living upside-down, the ideas fall off of us” (Lavado 2018 [1964], pp. 99–100).

      In a way, these manipulations of the constitutive principles of maps (projection, orientation and graphic language) for ideological purposes or cultural decentering are an extension of Harley’s own reflections in Deconstructing the Map on the “rule of ethnocentricity” of world maps (Harley 1989, p. 6). These diversions were innovative and powerfully evocative during the Cold War period, when questioning a Western-centric view of the world was not self-evident. Today they have become common practice. However, their pedagogical effectiveness continues to be proven today,