Bender, S., Berry, I., Possidente, B. and Wilkinson, R., editors 2002: The world according to the newest and most exact observations: mapping art and science. Saratoga Springs, NY: Tang Teaching Museum.
3.
Binding, P.2003: Imagined corners: exploring the world's first atlas. London: Headline.
4.
Brody, H.1986: Maps and dreams. London: Faber.
5.
Brown, B.2004: Working with the problems of tourism. http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/-barry/papers/workingtourism.pdf (last accessed 25 March 2004).
6.
Brown, B. and Laurier, E.2004: Maps and journeying: an ethnographic approach. Glasgow: Department of Computer Science University of Glasgow. http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/,barry/papers/Maps.pdf (last accessed 25 March 2004).
7.
Bruno, G.2002: Atlas of emotion: journeys in art architecture and film. New York: Verso.
8.
Cameron, A. and Palan, R.2004: The imagined economies of globalization. London: Sage.
9.
Casey, E.2002: Representing place: landscape painting and maps. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
10.
Clifford, N.J. and Valentine, G.2003: Key methods in geography. London: Sage.
11.
Cloud, J.2002: American cartographic transformations during the Cold War. Cartography and Geographic Information Science29(3) 261-282.
12.
Corporatewatch2003: City of London J18 map. http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/publications/squaringup/map/index.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
13.
Cosgrove, D., editor 1998: Mappings. London: Reaktion Books.
14.
Crampton, J.1999: Virtual geographies: the ethics of the internet. In Proctor, J. and Smith, D.M., editors, The ethics of geography: journeys in a moral terrain, London: Routledge, 72-91.
15.
Crampton, J.2001: Maps as social constructions: power, communication and visualization. Progress in Human Geography25, 235-252.
16.
Crampton, J.2002: Thinking philosophically in cartography: toward a critical politics of mapping. Cartographic Perspectives4212-31.
17.
Crampton, J.2003a: Cartographic rationality and the politics of geosurveillance and security. Cartography and Geographic Information Science30(2), 135-148.
18.
Crampton, J.2003b: The political mapping of cyberspace. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press.
19.
Crane, N.2002: Mercator: the man who mapped the planet. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
20.
Crang, M.2003: The hair in the gate: visuality and geographical knowledge. Antipode35238-243.
21.
Curran, M.2003: Dialogues of difference: con tested mappings of tourism and environmental protection in Butte, Montana. In Hanna, S.P. and del Casino, V.J.J., editors, Mapping tourism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 132-160.
22.
Delyser, D.2003: A walk through old Bodie: presenting a ghost town in a tourism map. In Hanna, S.P. and del Casino, V.J.J., editors, Mapping tourism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 79-107.
23.
Dodge, M.2003: Revealing hidden places: the Cryptome eyeballing map series. http://www.cybergeography.org/maps/maps27.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
24.
Dodge, M. and Kitchin, R.2000: Exposing the ‘second text’ of maps of the net. Journal of Computer Mediated Communication5(4). http://www.ascusc.org/jcmc/vol5/issue4/dodge-kitchin.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
25.
Driver, E2003: On Geography as a visual discipline. Antipode35, 227-231.
26.
Dykes, J., MacEachren, A.M. and Kraak, M.-J., editors 2004: Exploring geovisualization. New York: Elsevier.
27.
Edwards, J.2003: How to read an early modern map: between the particular and the general, the material and the abstract, words and mathematics. Early Modern Literary Studies9(1), 1-58. http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/09-1/edwarmaps.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
28.
Elkins, J.1999: The domain of images. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
29.
Hanna, S.P. and del Casino, V.J.J., editors 2003: Mapping tourism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
30.
Harley, J.B.1988: Maps knowledge and power. In Cosgrove, D. and Daniels, S., editors, The iconography of landscape, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 277-312.
31.
Harman, K.2003: You are here: personal geographies and other maps of the imagination. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
32.
Harpold, T.1999: Dark continents: critique of internet metageographies. Postmodern culture9(2). http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/postmodernculture/vOO9/9.2harpold.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
33.
Hartley, S.2001: Mrs P's journey: the remarkable story of the woman who created the A-Z map. London: Simon and Schuster.
34.
Harvey, M.2000: The island of lost maps: a true story of cartographic crime. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolsen.
35.
Helgerson, R.H.2001: The folly of maps and modernity. In Gordon, A. and Klein, B., editors, Literature mapping and the politics of space in early modern Britain, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 241-262.
36.
Hendrikson, A.K.2001: Book review: the new nature of maps: essays in the history of cartography. Journal of Interdisciplinary History33(4), 593-595.
37.
Holloway, S., Rice, S.P. and Valentine, G.2003: Key concepts in geography. London: Sage.
38.
Holmes, B.2002: Mapping excess, seeking uses; Bureau d'Etudes and multiplicity. http://utangente.free.fr/anewpages/cartesholmes2.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
39.
Hostetler, L.2001: Qing colonial enterprise: ethnography and cartography in early modern China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
40.
Ingold, T.2001: The perception of the environment. London: Routledge.
41.
Joyce, P.2003: The rule of freedom: the city and the modern liberal subject. London: Verso.
42.
King, G.1996: Mapping reality: an exploration of cultural cartographies. Basingstoke: MacMillan.
43.
Krygier, J.1999: Cartographic multimedia and praxis in human geography and the social sciences. In Cartwright, W., Peterson, M. and Gartner, G., editors, Multimedia cartography, London: Springer Verlag, 245-255.
44.
Krygier, J.B. and Peoples, D.2003: Geographic information literacy and the world wide web. In Peterson, M.P., editor, Maps and the internet, New York: Elsevier.
45.
Kwan, M.P.2002a: Feminist visualization: reenvisioning GIS as a method in feminist geographic research. Annals of the Assocciation of American Geographers92(4), 645-661.
46.
Kwan, M.P.2002b: Introduction: feminist geography and GIS. Gender Place Culture9(3), 261-262.
47.
Lilley, K.D.2000: Landscape mapping and symbolic form: drawing as a creative medium in cultural geography. In Cook, I., Crouch, D., Naylor, S. and Ryan, J.R., editors, Cultural turns, geographical turns: perspectives on cultural geography, Harlow: Prentice Hall, 231-245.
48.
MacEachren, A.M.2000: Cartography and GIS: facilitating collaboration. Progress in Human Geography24, 445-456.
49.
MacEachren, A.M.2001: Cartography and GIS: extending collaborative tools to support virtual teams. Progress in Human Geography25, 431-444.
50.
Mangani, G.1998: Abraham Ortelius and the hermetic meaning of the cordiform projection. Imago Mundi50, 59-83.
51.
Martin, R.L.2000: Editorial: in memory of maps. Transactions of the Institute of British GeographersNS 25, 3-5.
52.
Matless, D.2003: Gestures around the visual. Antipode35, 222-226.
53.
McClellan, J.2003: Get caught mapping. Guardian Unlimited 27 March. http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story/o,3605,922337,00.html (last accessed 25 March 2004).
54.
McLafferty, S.L.2002: Mapping women's worlds: knowledge, power and the bounds of GIS. Gender Place Culture9(3) 263-269.
55.
Miller, N.2003: Mapping the city: the language and culture of cartography in the renaissance. London: Continuum.
56.
Monmonier, M.S.2002: Spying with maps: surveillance technologies and the future of privacy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
57.
Moretti, F.1998: Atlas of the European novel. London: Verso.
58.
Nash, C.2000: Performativity in practice: some recent work in cultural geography. Progress in Human Geography24, 653-664.
59.
Orlove, B.1993: The ethnography of maps: the cultural and social contexts of cartographic representations in Peru. Cartographica30(1), 29-46.
60.
Paulston, R., editor 1996: Social cartography. New York: Garland.
61.
Perkins, C.2003a: Cartography: mapping theory. Progress in Human Geography27325-335.
62.
Perkins, C.2003b: Cartography and graphicacy. In Clifford, N. and Vallentine, G., editors, Key methods in human and physical geography, London: Sage, 343-368.
63.
Perkins, C.2004: Placing the shots: the design and use of golf course planners. The Cartographic Journal41(2), in press.
64.
Perkins, C.R. and Gardiner, A.2003: Real world map reading strategies. The Cartographic Journal40(3), 265-268.
65.
Peterson, M.P., editor 2003: Maps and the internet. New York: Elsevier.
66.
Pickles, J.1999: Social and cultural cartographies and the spatial turn in social theory. Journal of Historical Geography25(1), 93-98.
67.
Pickles, J.2003: A history of spaces: mapping cartographic reason and the over-coded world. London: Routledge.
68.
Piper, K.2002: Cartographic fictions: maps, race and identity. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
69.
Postnikov, A.V.2002: Maps for ordinary consumers versus maps for the military: double standards of map accuracy in Soviet cartography 1917-1991. Cartography and Geographic Information Science29(3), 243-260.
70.
Rose, G.2001: Visual methodologies: an introduction to the interpretation of visual materials. London: Sage.
71.
Rose, G.2003: On the need to ask how, exactly is geography ‘visual’?Antipode35, 212-221.
72.
Ryan, J.2003: Who's afraid of visual culture?Antipode35, 232-237.
73.
Schienke, E.W.2003: Who's mapping the mappers?: ethnographic research in the production of digital cartography. In Hard, M., Losch, A. and Verdicchio, D., editors, Transforming spaces: the topological turn in technology studies, Darmstadt: Technishe Universitat Darmstadt.
74.
Schulten, S.2001: The geographical imagination in America, 1880-1950. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
75.
Shields, R.2003: Political tourism: mapping memory and the future at Quebec City. In Hanna, S.P. and Del Casino, V.J.J., editors, Mapping tourism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1-27.
76.
Shirley, R.1982: Epichthonius cosmopolites: who was he?Map Collector18, 39-40.
77.
Silberman, R. and McDonnell, P.2000: World views: maps and art. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
78.
Silver, M. and Balmori, D., editors 2003: Mapping in the age of digital media: the Yale symposium. Chichester: Wiley.
79.
Sobel, D.1996: Longitude: the true story of a lone genius who solved the greatest scientific problem of his time. London: Fourth Estate.
80.
Sparke, M.1995: Between demythologizing and deconstructing the map: Shawnadithit's New-found-land and the alienation of Canada. Cartographica31(1), 1-21.
81.
Sui, D.Z.2000: Visuality, aurality and shifting metaphors of geographical thought in the late twentieth century. Annals of the Association of American Geographers90, 322-343.
82.
Thrift, N.1999: Steps to an ecology of space. In Massey, D., editor, Human geography today, Cambridge: Polity, 295-322.
83.
Till, K.E.2003: Construction sites and showcases: mapping the new Berlin through tourism practices. In Hanna, S.P. and Del Casino, V.J.J., editors, Mapping tourism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 51-78.
84.
Tooley, R.V.1963: Geographical oddities, or curious ingenious and imaginary maps and miscellaneous plates published in atlases. London: Map Collectors' Circle.
85.
Turnbull, D.2000: Masons, tricksters and cartographers: comparative studies in the sociology of science. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic.
86.
Vujakovic, P.2002: Mapping the war zone: cartography, geopolitics and security discourse in the UK press. Journalism Studies3(2) 187-202.
87.
Whitfield, P.1994: The image of the world: 20 centuries of world maps. London: British Library.
88.
Winchester, S.2001: The map that changed the world: the tale of William Smith and the birth of a science. London: Viking.
89.
Wood, D.1993: What makes a map a map?Cartographica30(2-3), 81-86.
90.
Yonemoto, M.2003: Mapping early modern Japan. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.