
Published online:
18 January 2018
Published in print:
23 June 2017
Online ISBN:
9780262339957
Print ISBN:
9780262036153
Contents
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Irrational Rationality in the Landscapes of Palestine and Israel Irrational Rationality in the Landscapes of Palestine and Israel
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Making Empires, Making Maps Making Empires, Making Maps
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Cartographies of Empire and Empirical Cartography Cartographies of Empire and Empirical Cartography
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Producing Landscapes for Traveling Cartographers Producing Landscapes for Traveling Cartographers
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The Production of Landscapes, the Production of Maps The Production of Landscapes, the Production of Maps
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The Rational Landscape of Palestine and Israel The Rational Landscape of Palestine and Israel
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Developing Colonialism and the Imperial Modern Developing Colonialism and the Imperial Modern
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Landscapes and Labscapes in STS Landscapes and Labscapes in STS
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GIS and Landscapes of Technological Practice GIS and Landscapes of Technological Practice
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Maps as Interactive Visual Databases Maps as Interactive Visual Databases
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Critical GIS: The Work of Making Maps Critical GIS: The Work of Making Maps
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Asymmetrical Violence and the Violence of Symmetry Asymmetrical Violence and the Violence of Symmetry
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Conclusion: Postcolonial GIS Conclusion: Postcolonial GIS
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Cite
Bier, Jess, 'The Materiality of Theory', Mapping Israel, Mapping Palestine: How Occupied Landscapes Shape Scientific Knowledge (Cambridge, MA , 2017; online edn, MIT Press Scholarship Online, 18 Jan. 2018), https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/9780262036153.003.0002, accessed 25 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
Chapter 2, “The Materiality of Theory”, tells the story of the (ir)rationalization of the landscape of Palestine and Israel after 1948. It explores how the colonial legacies of cartography continue to influence land management and development efforts. It also outlines the benefits of combining critical geographical studies, including the literature on science and empire, with science and technology studies (STS) research that examines how specific technologies are intrinsically shaped by their social and material contexts.
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