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Issue Details: First known date: 2008... 2008 Cartographic Conspiracies: Maps, Misinformation, and Exploitation in Peter Carey's 'American Dreams'
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

Nicholas Dunlop discusses the 'difficulties inherent in transferring or compressing our own epistemologies of space and time into a static, two-dimensional model' - the map. In this context he examines Peter Carey's American Dreams as 'a useful introduction to the ways in which Carey's work frequently questions the use of the cartographic metaphor for the pursuit or maintenance of individual or hegemonic agendas'.

Dunlop concludes: 'American Dreams ... articulates the ways in which the manipulation of maps ... may affect cultural realities and how that culture perceives its spatial boundaries and the individuals within it'.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Antipodes vol. 22 no. 1 June 2008 Z1521663 2008 periodical issue 2008 pg. 33-39
    Note: Includes end notes and list of works cited.
Last amended 14 Aug 2008 13:51:19
33-39 Cartographic Conspiracies: Maps, Misinformation, and Exploitation in Peter Carey's 'American Dreams'small AustLit logo Antipodes
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