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*New Directions in Ethno-Cartography*

*Organised by the *Livingmaps Network
<http://www.livingmaps.org.uk/index.php>

*Time and date:* March 15th, 6pm
<http://airmail.calendar/2017-03-15%2018:00:00%20GMT>

*Venue: *Development Planning Unit, 34 Tavistock Square, London

*Book online:* http://bit.ly/2lUZx1G

*Chair: *Phil Cohen

*Speakers:*

   - *Christos Varvantakis*, Research Fellow at the University of Sussex
   - *Jina Lee*, PhD candidate at the University of the Arts London
   - *Katherine Stansfeld*, PhD candidate at Royal Holloway, University of
   London
   - *Juliet Davis*, Senior Lecturer at Cardiff University
   - *Sevasti-Melissa Nolas*, Senior Lecture at the University of Sussex

*About the event: *

Ethnographers have always been interested in how spatial practices
articulate cultural forms, and vice versa. Social geographers have also
been concerned to explore mental maps and how these shape or reflect the
way different groups navigate and make sense of their environment.

However, despite their potential convergence around notions of place
intelligence and the living map, there has been little dialogue between
these disciplines. Our four speakers will draw on their own research to
discuss the points of intersection - and tension - between these different
perspectives.

*Christos Varvantakis, Research Fellow at the University of Sussex, and
Sevasti-Melissa Nolas, Senior Lecturer at the University of Sussex*, will
discuss how children map their neighbourhoods and things that matter to
them. Drawing on research conducted in London and Athens, Varvantakis and
Nolas will explore how, in the hands of children, maps become more than a
representational framework, instead revealing children’s desires and
critiques of their lives beyond the domestic or private sphere.

*Jina Lee, PhD candidate at the University of the Arts London*, will
describe how her practice-based research as an artist-cartographer
re-examines the role of drawing in map-making, highlighting as it does the
process and agency involved in creating maps. Lee will draw on her work
with the Joseonjok people in New Malden, London, to explore contemporary
drawing practices.

*Katherine Stansfeld, PhD candidate at Royal Holloway, University of London*,
will investigate the potential of visual ethnography and cartographic
practice to explore and re-imagine the super-diverse city. Drawing on her
research in Finsbury Park, north-east London, Stansfeld will explain how
mapping has the potential to express the multiplicity of meaning that
exists in super-diverse places.

*Juliet Davis, senior lecturer in architecture at Cardiff University*, will
reflect on the redevelopment of the 2012 Olympic Games site in East London,
portrayed in planning documents as an industrial wasteland. Drawing on
historical, cartographic and photographic research, Davis will offer an
alternative account of the site as an historical, lived, working landscape,
and will go on to reveal some of the legacies of redevelopment for the
industrial users who were dispersed to make way for the Games.
*Claire Bracegirdle*
+44 (0)7449 320 938 | cbracegirdle.net <http://www.cbracegirdle.net/> |
@c_bracegirdle

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