Critical cartography as anarchist pedagogy? Ideas for praxis inspired by the 56a infoshop map archive

Article


Firth, R. 2014. Critical cartography as anarchist pedagogy? Ideas for praxis inspired by the 56a infoshop map archive. Interface : a journal for and about social movements. 16 (1), pp. 156-184.
AuthorsFirth, R.
Abstract

Critical cartography is a methodology and pedagogy that begins from the premise that maps are embodiments of power. It advocates utopian possibilities for other mapping practices, providing tools for communities to spatially illustrate their struggles whilst reconstituting social bonds through collective knowledge production. Whilst critical cartographers gesture towards activist initiatives, a lot of the literature focuses mainly on theory and is light on alternative practices, failing to explore their pedagogical and transformative value. Furthermore, those literatures that do study practice tend to focus on ‘counter-mapping’, for example enabling indigenous communities to make resource claims. Such practices undoubtedly have progressive uses but have also been criticized for investing in dominant spatial practice and for perpetuating exclusions and hierarchies. This paper argues for a critical cartographic practice based on an anarchist ethos of anti- rather than counter-hegemony, drawing ideas of cartographic pedagogy as affect,
affinity and performativity.
Furthermore it argues that such practices already exist and ought to be expanded. Using David Graeber’s ethnographic methodology of ‘utopian extrapolation’ the paper will draw on material found in the ‘map archive’ of the 56a infoshop in London to begin to inspire and imagine an anarchist cartographic pedagogy.

Keywordscartography; pedagogy; anarchism
JournalInterface : a journal for and about social movements
Journal citation16 (1), pp. 156-184
ISSN2009 – 2431
Year2014
PublisherNational University of Ireland Maynooth
Publisher's version
License
CC BY-NC-SA
Web address (URL)http://www.interfacejournal.net/2014/06/interface-volume-6-issue-1-movement-pedagogies/
Publication dates
Print01 May 2014
Publication process dates
Deposited07 Jul 2014
Permalink -

https://repository.uel.ac.uk/item/85q12

Download files


Publisher's version
Interface-6-1-Firth.pdf
License: CC BY-NC-SA

  • 608
    total views
  • 873
    total downloads
  • 2
    views this month
  • 1
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Critical Cartography
Firth, R. 2015. Critical Cartography. The Occupied Times of London.
Utopian Politics: Citizenship and Practice
Firth, R. 2011. Utopian Politics: Citizenship and Practice. Abingdon, Oxon and New York, NY Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.
Evaluation of a non-statutory ‘Place of Calm’, a service which provides support after a suicidal crisis to inform future commissioning intentions
Briggs, S., Finch, J. and Firth, R. 2016. Evaluation of a non-statutory ‘Place of Calm’, a service which provides support after a suicidal crisis to inform future commissioning intentions. School of Education & Communities, University of East London.
From the Unlearned Un-Man to a Pedagogy without Moulding: Stirner, consciousness raising, and the production of difference
Firth, R. and Robinson, A. 2017. From the Unlearned Un-Man to a Pedagogy without Moulding: Stirner, consciousness raising, and the production of difference. in: Haworth, Robert and Elmore, John M. (ed.) 'Out of the Ruins’: The Emergence of New Radical Informal Learning Spaces Oakland, CA, USA PM Press. pp. 56-73
Monsters Take to the Streets! Monstrous Street-Art as Pedagogy of Resistance to Post-Olympic Regeneration in Hackney Wick?
Firth, R. 2016. Monsters Take to the Streets! Monstrous Street-Art as Pedagogy of Resistance to Post-Olympic Regeneration in Hackney Wick? in: Munteán, László and Post, Hans Christian (ed.) Landscapes of Monstrosity Inter-Discipinary Press.
Future(s) Perfect: uchronian mapping as a research and visualisation tool in the fringes of the Olympic Park
Firth, R., Ferrei, Mara and Lang, Andreas 2016. Future(s) Perfect: uchronian mapping as a research and visualisation tool in the fringes of the Olympic Park. Livingmaps Review. 1 (1).
For a Revival of Feminist Consciousness Raising: Horizontal Transformation of Epistemologies and Transgression of Neoliberal TimeSpace
Firth, R. 2016. For a Revival of Feminist Consciousness Raising: Horizontal Transformation of Epistemologies and Transgression of Neoliberal TimeSpace. Gender and Education. 28 (3), pp. 343-358. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540253.2016.1166182
Somatic pedagogies: Critiquing and resisting the affective discourse of the neoliberal state from an embodied anarchist perspective.
Firth, R. 2016. Somatic pedagogies: Critiquing and resisting the affective discourse of the neoliberal state from an embodied anarchist perspective. Ephemera: Theory and Politics in Organization. 16 (4), pp. 121-142.
For the past yet to come: Utopian conceptions of time and becoming
Firth, R. and Robinson, A. 2014. For the past yet to come: Utopian conceptions of time and becoming. Time & Society. 23 (3), pp. 380-401. https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X13482881
Toward a Critical Utopian and Pedagogical Methodology
Firth, R. 2013. Toward a Critical Utopian and Pedagogical Methodology. Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies. 35 (4), pp. 256-276.
TRANSGRESSING URBAN UTOPANISM: AUTONOMY AND ACTIVE DESIRE
Firth, R. 2012. TRANSGRESSING URBAN UTOPANISM: AUTONOMY AND ACTIVE DESIRE. Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography. 94 (2), pp. 89-106.