Geographies of Mars | K. Maria D. Lane
$1.195,00
Disponibles: 10 últimas unidades
Sucursal Cantidad disponible
Cargando disponibilidad...

K. Maria D. Lane
Geographies of Mars
Seeing and Knowing the Red Planet
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS

Libro disponible en 5 dias hábiles.

Páginas: 280
Precio: 1195.0
Estado: Nuevo
Peso: 0.41 kgs.
ISBN: 9780226849232

A highly original exploration of...

Paga con:

masterpaypalshopify payvisa

Recibí tu entrega en 48 - 72 horas.

Geographies of Mars | K. Maria D. Lane
- +
">
K. Maria D. Lane
Geographies of Mars
Seeing and Knowing the Red Planet
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS

Libro disponible en 5 dias hábiles.

Páginas: 280
Precio: 1195.0
Estado: Nuevo
Peso: 0.41 kgs.
ISBN: 9780226849232

A highly original exploration of geographys spatial dimensions at the beginning of the twentieth century, offering a new view of the mapping of far-off worlds.One of the first maps of Mars, published by an Italian astronomer in 1877, with its pattern of canals, fueled belief in intelligent life forms on the distant red planeta hope that continued into the 1960s. Although the Martian canals have long since been dismissed as a famous error in the history of science, K. Maria D. Lane argues that there was nothing accidental about these early interpretations. Indeed, she argues, the construction of Mars as an incomprehensibly complex and engineered world both reflected and challenged dominant geopolitical themes during a time of major cultural, intellectual, political, and economic transition in the Western world.Geographies of Mars telescopes in on a critical period in the development of the geographical imagination, when European imperialism was at its zenith and American expansionism had begun in earnest. Astronomers working in the new observatories of the American Southwest or in the remote heights of the South American Andes were inspired, Lane finds, by their own physical surroundings and used representations of the Earths arid landscapes to establish credibility for their observations of Mars. With this simple shift to the geographers point of view, Lane deftly explains some of the most perplexing stances on Mars taken by familiar protagonists such as Percival Lowell, Alfred Russel Wallace, and Lester Frank Ward.