ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
JAMES R. AKERMAN
CHAPTER ONE
The Irony of Imperial Mapping
MATTHEW H. EDNEY
CHAPTER TWO
“Exalted and Glorified to the Ends of the Earth”: Imperial Maps and Christian Spaces in Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century Russian Siberia
VALERIE A. KIVELSON
CHAPTER THREE
Contending Cartographic Claims? The Qing Empire in Manchu, Chinese, and European Maps
LAURA HOSTETLER
CHAPTER FOUR
The Confines of the Colony: Boundaries, Ethnographic Landscapes, and Imperial Cartography in Iberoamerica
NEIL SAFIER
CHAPTER FIVE
Hydrographic Discipline among the Navigators: Charting an “Empire of Science and Commerce” in the Nineteenth-Century Pacific
D. GRAHAM BURNETT
CHAPTER SIX
The Cartography of the Fourth Estate: Mapping the New Imperialism in British and French Newspapers, 1875–1925
MICHAEL HEFFERNAN
Notes
Contributors
Index