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Abstract machine : humanities GIS / Charles B. Travis.

Ebook Central Academic Complete Available online

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Ebook Central College Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Travis, Charles, 1964- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Geographic information systems.
Information storage and retrieval systems--Humanities.
Information storage and retrieval systems.
Humanities--Technological innovations.
Humanities.
Humanities--Methodology.
Space and time.
Geography and literature.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (154 pages) : illustrations
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Redlands, California : Esri Press, 2015.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Abstract Machine brings GIS tools to the arts and humanities. Topics include Irish literature and history, with a focus on writers such as Samuel Beckett, James Joyce, and Patrick Kavanagh. Illustrates the importance of GIS as an interpretive tool for disciplines in the humanities.
Contents:
Cover
Contents
Preface: Abstract machine
Acknowledgments
Part 1: GIS and the digital humanities
1. Introduction
From Lascaux to the Sea of Tranquility
What is a GIS?
GIS and the digital humanities
2. Toward the spatial turn
A brief history of Western geographical thought
Post-structuralist perspectives
Deep mapping
GIS and the space of conjecture
3. Writing time and space with GIS: The conquest and mapping of seventeenth-century Ireland
Period, place, and GIS
Geovisualizing Irish history
Rebellion and conquest in 3D
Surveying the Cromwellian Settlement
William Petty and the Down Survey
From the ballybetagh to the barony
The Books of Survey and Distribution
Database mapping the Books
Visualizing the webs of history
Part 2: Writers, texts, and mapping
4. GIS and the poetic eye
Mapping Kavanagh
Bakhtinian GIS
Creating a digital dinnseanchas
Plotting the poetic eye
5. Modeling and visualizing in GIS: The topological influences of Homer's Odyssey and Dante's Inferno on James Joyce's Ulysses (1922)
Joycean cartographies
Homer and Dante's topologies
Modeling Ulysses
The topologies of Ulysses
Upper Hell
Middle of Hell (City of Dis)
Lower Hell
Purgatory
Visualizing a "new Inferno in full sail"
6. Psychogeographical GIS: Creating a "kaleidoscope equipped with consciousness," Flann O'Brien's At Swim-Two-Birds (1939)
The novel as urban GIS
Spatializing At Swim-Two-Birds
Psychogeographical mapping with GIS
Vico-Bakhtin timespaces
Counter-cartographical GIS
7. Geovisualizing Beckett
Samuel Beckett's GIStimeline
Geovisual narratology
Dublin-Paris, 1916-30
Beckett's bottled climates
London, 1933-35
France, 1945-46
Bricolage and biography
Part 3. Toward a humanities GIS.
8. The terrae incognitae of humanities GIS
The lost mapmaker
The map theater
The geographer's science and the storyteller's art
About the author
Index
Back cover.
Notes:
Includes index.
Description based on print version record.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
ISBN:
1-58948-369-3
OCLC:
904413225

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