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Weaponizing Maps: Indigenous Peoples and Counterinsurgency in the Americas Illustrated Edition
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- ISBN-101462519911
- ISBN-13978-1462519910
- EditionIllustrated
- PublisherThe Guilford Press
- Publication dateMarch 5, 2015
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
- Print length272 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"'Map or be mapped,' the saying goes among those associated with the wave of participatory mapping that began in the 1980s. Weaponizing Maps gives this saying radically new meaning, with equal parts analytic depth and political charge. Readers inclined to use maps for causes of social justice will proceed fully informed of the daunting forces they are up against--from the counterinsurgency designs of the world’s most powerful military to ostensibly progressive scholars who deploy the fine tradition of participatory mapping toward dubious ends."--Charles R. Hale, PhD, Director, LLILAS Benson Latin American Studies and Collections, University of Texas at Austin
"Bold and confrontational. Bryan and Wood pull no punches in their indictment of the creeping militarization of geography and the once-respected American Geographical Society. The book's legacy will be marked by the extent to which geographers rethink their relationships with indigenous groups. It’s quite possible that we’re seeing the next generation of critical thinking about mapping in this book."--Jeremy Crampton, PhD, Department of Geography, University of Kentucky
"Using Oaxaca as a case study of a global trend, the book makes a compelling case that militarized colonial geographies seek to replace Indigenous collective lands with a privatized Western model, under the guise of both national security and Native self-determination. But the book is also a rich example of interdisciplinary inquiry, straddling the normative divides between domestic and foreign colonialism, historical and contemporary surveys, academic and activist analysis, and Indigenous and Left discourse. It is essential for understanding land disputes of the 21st century, anywhere in Native America or the world."--Zoltán Grossman, PhD, Professor of Geography and Native Studies, The Evergreen State College
"At times refreshingly polemical and unapologetically critical, Bryan and Wood provide valuable historical sketches that link the ideological and material ramifications of maps on indigenous communities and trace the development of property-based cartographic and geographic logics during wartime. Though the México Indígena project serves as a focal point, the authors deftly weave together the development of the American Geographical Society, the rise of indigenous mapping projects in the 1990s and their subsequent limitations, and the relationship between dominant geographic practices and the academic-military-industrial complex.” ― Great Plains Research Published On: 2017-10-18
"Joe and Denis trace how maps, over and over and over again, perform vital discursive work, how they transform territory into property, how they create facts, and how those facts seem to, time and time again, serve the particular interest of the state and/or capital at the expense of certain groups of people.” ― Human Geography Published On: 2017-03-28
"Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.” ― Choice Reviews Published On: 2015-10-01
About the Author
Denis Wood, PhD, is an independent scholar living in Raleigh, North Carolina. He lectures widely and is the author of a dozen books and over 150 papers. From 1974 to 1996, he taught in the School of Design at North Carolina State University. In 1992, he curated the Power of Maps exhibition for the Cooper-Hewitt National Museum of Design (remounted at the Smithsonian in Washington, DC, in 1994), for which he wrote the book The Power of Maps. His other books include Rethinking the Power of Maps; Making Maps, Third Edition (coauthored with John Krygier); and Weaponizing Maps (coauthored with Joe Bryan).
Product details
- Publisher : The Guilford Press; Illustrated edition (March 5, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1462519911
- ISBN-13 : 978-1462519910
- Item Weight : 14.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,350,909 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #156 in Geography (Books)
- #621 in Earth Sciences (Books)
- #738 in Public Policy (Books)
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The span of Bryan's and Wood's exposition, from Nicaragua in the late 1920s to the young Pierre Trudeau government in Canada in the 1960s and more, shows how time and time again, advanced First World governments used their legal jargon and geographical pre-text in attempts to control or bring into the fold native lands in their reach. As Bryan and Wood note about Herlihy and geographers like him, " they offered a variation on a long running theme of advancing imperial interests through the twinned militarization of geography and saving the Indian."
I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the continued modern approach to the dissolution of indigenous lands and rights and to the vast inroads military money has made not just into politics, but into scholarship delivered as unbiased, intellectual property.





