The textualities of the autobiogrAfrical
Date
2020Author
Murray, Sally Ann
Moolla, F. Fiona
Slabbert, Mathilda
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In your mind’s eye, summon a map of the world—that famous text.
There, there is Africa. The familiar, highly visible bulge of head to horn
and curve, and the islands as you travel down to the continent’s southernmost
point. It is likely that your imagination, like ours, has archived the
inherited template of a Mercator projection, the powerful sixteenth-century
cartography which remains influential offline and e-nfluential on
Google Maps, even though it misleadingly distorts the size of continents.
The 30.2 million square kilometers of the African continent appear much
smaller than, say, the areas of the US (9.1 million square kilometers),
Russia (16.4 million square kilometers), or China (9.4 million square kilometers).
In comparison, the corrective cartographic morphing of the Gall-
Peters projection revises the habituated representational geography of the
world’s landmasses, showing the relational sizes of continents more
accurately