We’ll talk about the theory and practice of mapping extensively today, and we’ll look at some really compelling examples to guide us. I thought, however, that focusing exclusively on “industrial-grade” projects undertaken by teams of seasoned researchers (and sometimes teams of programmers and cartographers) might produce anxiety and give a false sense of our goals for this project.
So I’m linking to a few prior projects (from 2020). What’s valuable here is that each post includes a link or image of a finished map as well as a reflection on the process/product. This combination has several benefits for us:
- we can see what we’re aiming at in terms of ambition and scale in the actual object we’re buildling
- through the reflections, we can grasp why the student chose the platform and approach they worked with
- likewise, we learn what kinds of work/expertise were involved (some refer to prior knowledge of JavaScript, for example, whereas others state plainly that they wanted a simple tool)
- perhaps most important, we learn about false starts, dead ends, detours, and failures
- finally, we have some good models of how to write the blog post itself, which is part of the assignment.
With no further ado, here are a few examples:
- Allison Daugila’s map of yoga studios pre-covid: very simple and effective mapping in the wake of the economic impact of the pandemic.
- Brianna Caszatt’s map of cemeteries in Brooklyn and Queens: plays with some of the “grammar” of maps explored in the “How to Lie” piece.
- Patricia Belen’s map of the nationalities of non-American artists at MoMA: interesting example of mapping something that’s often not obviously geographical in nature.
- Freddy Castro’s map (related to Daugila’s above) of the pre-Covid restaurant landscape of NYC
- Elena Abou Mrad’s visualization of the topography of Langston Hughes’s depiction of Sugar Hill in the poem “Harlem Sweeties.” This interplay between the territorial and the fictive/poetic is a rich vein to explore!
- Phil Agee’s “timeline experiment”: especially valuable for his thinking about process.
- Maggi Delgado’s memoirish map of her family’s migration from the Dominican Republic to the US. Great example of how static maps and mobile itineraries might come together.

