1 |
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Lost and found in the map library: changes in early map librarianship |
Georgia Brown, UW-Milwaukee Libraries, WI, USA, gives the third talk in session 3B of the seminar. |
Georgia Brown |
12 May 2021 |
2 |
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Beyond “clerical cartography”: gender and the production of Sanborn fire insurance maps in the 1920s |
Jack Swab, University of Kentucky, USA, gives the second talk in session 3B in the seminar. |
Jack Swab |
12 May 2021 |
3 |
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Where are all the women? The case of the Halls |
Debbie Hall, Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in session 3B in the seminar. |
Debbie Hall |
12 May 2021 |
4 |
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The political cartographies of Marthe Rajchman |
Mike Heffernan and Benjamin Thorpe, University of Nottingham, give the first talk of session 3A in the seminar. |
Mike Heffernan, Benjamin Thorpe |
12 May 2021 |
5 |
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From body as territory to feminicides mapping: discourses and mapping languages by Latin American feminist cartographies |
Manuela Silveira, State University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, gives the third talk in the second session of the seminar. |
Manuela Silveira |
12 May 2021 |
6 |
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Mapping toward equitable solutions in public transit planning |
Suzie Birdsell, Nelson\Nygaard Consulting, Boston, USA, gives the second presentation, in the second session of the seminar. |
Suzie Birdsell |
12 May 2021 |
7 |
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‘Octavia always enjoyed a map’: Octavia Hill, maps, and Victorian social reform |
Elizabeth Baigent, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in the second session of the seminar. |
Elizabeth Baigent |
12 May 2021 |
8 |
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Women and children first: gender, flood and victimhood in Dutch eighteenth-century maps of dike-breaks |
Anne-Rieke van Schaik, University of Amsterdam, gives the third in the first session of the seminar. |
Anne-Rieke van Schaik |
12 May 2021 |
9 |
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The rise, persistence and surprising end of female personifications of the continents on maps |
Chet Van Duzer, University of Rochester, NY, USA, gives the second presentation in the first session of the seminar. |
Chet Van Duzer |
12 May 2021 |
10 |
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Where are the women on sixteenth-century French World maps? |
Camille Serchuk, Southern Connecticut State University, USA, gives the first talk in the first session of the seminar. |
Camille Serchuk |
12 May 2021 |
11 |
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Welcome and Introduction |
Catríona Cannon, Deputy Librarian, Bodleian Libraries, introduces the seminar. |
Catriona Cannon |
12 May 2021 |
12 |
Creative Commons |
Fitting it in, filling it out: from Christopher Saxton's survey to Ralph Sheldon's tapestry maps |
This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium |
Hilary Turner |
02 Dec 2019 |
13 |
Creative Commons |
The Catholic Gentry in Ralph Sheldon’s Midlands |
This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium |
Katie McKeogh |
02 Dec 2019 |
14 |
Creative Commons |
Power, Propaganda, Magnificence: the cartographic background to the Sheldon tapestry maps |
This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium |
Peter Barber |
02 Dec 2019 |
15 |
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One stitch at the time: Returning the Sheldon Tapestry Maps to life |
This talk was given as part of the Sheldon Tapestry Maps Symposium |
Nick Millea, Virginia llado-Buisan |
02 Dec 2019 |
16 |
Creative Commons |
Conflicting Views: Print Propaganda Depicting Tourism in a Landscape of War |
An analysis of Ruth Taylor White’s “cartograph” for the 1945 guidebook A G.I. View of American Red Cross China, India and Burma, published by the American Red Cross. |
Dori Griffin |
30 Sep 2014 |
17 |
Creative Commons |
The Selden Map |
The Selden Map of China has been one of the treasures of the Bodleian Library since 1659. This film shows how this remarkable map is interpreted today by scholars from a range of different disciplines. |
Kate Bennett, David Helliwell, Ros Ballaster, Rana Mitter |
29 May 2013 |
18 |
Creative Commons |
Transnational Cartography? A Circum-Atlantic Solution to the Niger Problem, 1795-1842 - Oxford Transnational and Global History Seminar |
Dr David Lambert, Reader in Historical Geography, University of London, gives a talk for The Oxford Transnational and Global History Seminar series. |
David Lambert |
02 Feb 2012 |