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Dear all, 

A reminder that this Wednesday (19th) Livingmaps Network is holding an event with UCL’s Development Planning Unit, Cartography and Everyday Struggles over Material Resources in Latin America. More information and tickets are available  here.

On May 10th, we’ll be welcoming Joanna Parker from the University of Exeter for the following event:

Maps that Shift and Grow: Five Alternative Ways of Mapping Britain

Time and date:  May 10th, 6pm (note that this event has been rescheduled)

Venue:  Development Planning Unit at UCL, 34 Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9EZ (map)

Book online:  http://bit.ly/2pmw5mF

Price:  £5 / £10

Chair:  Phil Cohen

Sign up for updates from Livingmaps Network:  http://eepurl.com/cgkYz1

Just as any chart of the night sky represents only a fraction of what really exists up there in the illimitable space beyond our planet, so too any published map of Britain will always be merely an outline of what is most obvious – what can be picked out with least difficulty. Beyond that, there will always be numberless constellations of ideas: vague glimmerings which, once the eye is trained upon them, sharpen into intriguing universes.

In this seminar, Joanne Parker  (University of Exeter) will explore five alternative maps of Britain that exist within the lines of our “official” maps: the caver’s map of Britain, the canal map of Britain, the aeronautical map of Britain, the ley-hunter’s map of Britain, and the megalithic map of Britain.

She will consider how these maps divide up the country, irrespective of political borders and conventional categories of ‘rural’ and ‘urban’; how the maps shift and alter with the discovery of new sites and routes, and what importance they hold today for drawing communities together.

About the speaker

Joanne Parker  is Senior Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Exeter. Her research focuses on the relationships between literature, folklore, history and place.  Among other things, she has published on the medieval revival in the South West (Art and Soul, 2014), on creative responses to prehistoric remains (Written on Stone, 2009), and on the Victorian fascination with King Alfred (England’s Darling, 2007). Her most recent book is Britannia Obscura: Mapping Hidden Britain (Jonathan Cape, 2014/Vintage 2015) and she is currently part of the ERC-funded Past in its Place project, looking at ‘sites of memory’ across Britain, including the folklore of gibbet sites, novels about Hadrian’s Wall, and popular beliefs about prehistoric sites.

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Best,

Claire

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