Yusoff, Kathryn, 'Visualizing Antarctica as a Place in Time', Space and Culture : International Journal of Social Spaces, 8 (4), 2005.
ABSTRACT
This article presents a chronogeographic account of the Antarctic
spatialities that are inflected through the image of the RADARSAT map.
Focusing on time as a spatializing operation within the visual geography
of globalizing and globally available cartographies, the author
questions the multiple geographies that must be considered in a
geopolitical account of such a mapping. The subject of this topology is
the “event” of the NASA RADARSAT map of Antarctica exhibiting the
effects of global warming as a scientific and media event on the Web.
Specifically the RADARSAT map documents destruction and also renders it
innocuous through technologies of distance. This realization of
geopolitical imperatives through scientific visualization reveals
particular tensions and operations within Antarctic and global visual
cultures. As a narrative cartography, it exhibits how geographic
information systems operate in a plurality of visual regimes. The author
concludes that the politics of visualizing Antarctica is embedded in
the histories of its media production and in this reveals how time has a
chronogeographic operation.
HERE
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