Poems Shaped Like Maps: (Di)Versifying the Teaching of Geography, II

Authors

  • Adele J. Haft Department of Classical and Oriental Studies Hunter College The City Univ. of New York

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14714/CP36.825

Keywords:

poetry about maps, map/geography education, , visual poetry

Abstract

This paper is about poems shaped like maps. It presents a brief history of visual poetry, beginning with the ancient Greek technopaignia and culminating in the concrete and experimental map-poems of the latter half of the twentieth century. After outlining some resemblances between concrete poetry and maps generally, the paper focuses on nine works spanning nearly forty years: from “Geographica Europa” by Eugen Gomringer, a founder of concrete poetry (1960), to “Manhattan” by Howard Horowitz, a professional geographer and poet (1997). Because these poems are maps, and because visual poetry resembles cartography in its graphic form, these playful map-poems offer a delightfully eccentric way to teach how maps—like/as poems—are generalized, simplified, and selective views of the world. This paper will tell their stories.

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Published

2000-06-01

How to Cite

Haft, A. J. (2000). Poems Shaped Like Maps: (Di)Versifying the Teaching of Geography, II. Cartographic Perspectives, (36), 66–91. https://doi.org/10.14714/CP36.825

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