[ 1] http://www.aca-demiccommons.org/
commons/essay/
balsamo-taking-culture-seriously
July + August 2008
out. The question is really about
what gets in and what does not.
In the Middle Ages maps were
not necessarily about navigation; there were many blanks in
people’s knowledge of lands near
and far. Many maps were not
“practical”; they were not about
navigating from point A to point
B. Christian mapmakers drew
up mappa mundi that showed
their understanding of the world,
including heaven and hell. The
most famous examples are the
Ebstorf map (created circa 1234
AD) and the Hereford map (
created circa 1300 AD). To our modern eyes, these maps look positively fanciful; known locations
and key features are represented,
but the spaces between them are
filled with (literally) fantastic
images. Cartographers weren’t
just filling the gaps for visual
continuity, however, they were
representing what was important and unimportant, what was
near and what was far—morally,
ethically, and emotionally, rather
than what was near and far
spatially. As Alfred Crosby, the
historian phrased it, these maps
were for “sinners not navigators”; they were meant to be used
to chart conceptual and moral
knowledge and to reflect the harmonious order of God’s creation.
For these mapmakers, those
spaces between things known
were never blank. They were
dauntingly full of imaginings—
beasties and peoples unknown,
Lilliputians and dragons.
With savage-pictures fill their gaps;
And o’er uninhabitable downs
Place elephants for want of towns
—Jonathan Swift,
the Irish cleric and essayist
(1667–1745)
While I actually don’t want to
rag on the Tom Tom too much (I
do love it), I want to make the
point that what is in the data-base, what things are left blank,
and how we route people are not
only aesthetic but also social
and political choices. In his book
Imagined Communities, Benedict
Anderson discusses the drawing of maps by colonial rulers.
He points out the ways in which
maps were drawn and imposed
upon colonially occupied lands,
and how the borders they charted failed to honor the perspective
of the people(s) who were living
there. These imposed borders
created social tensions that still
have ramifications today. This
lesson should not be taken as
a distant one, only useful for
politicians and historians. Design
blindness and political/cultural
ignorance can have an immediate impact on business choices.
A great example is elaborated by
Anne Balsamo of the University
of Southern California in her
essay of a few years back entitled “Taking Culture Seriously:
Educating and Inspiring the
Technological Imagination.” She
writes: “A map of India included
in the Windows 95 OS represented a small territory in a different
shade of green from the rest of
the country. The territory is, in
fact, strongly disputed between
the Kashmiri people and the
Indian government; but Microsoft
designers inadvertently settled
the dispute in favor of one side.
Assigning the territory (roughly 8
pixels in size on the digital map)
a different shade of green signified that the territory was definitely not part of India. The product was immediately banned in
India and Microsoft had no choice
but to recall 200,000 copies [ 1].”
The Tom Tom is a “
wayfinding” device. In 1960, the architect
Kevin Lynch coined the term
“wayfinding” in his book The
Image of the City. He described
how people orientate and choose
paths within the built environment, taking into account how
architectural and/or design
elements—signs, maps—give
travelers information about
their current location and how
to get to their desired location. It
occurred to me that I had mostly
thought of navigation devices
like the Tom Tom as being only
for wayfinding by car. But wayfinding is crucially affected
by mode of transport— I was
immensely pleased to discover
navigation devices for sailing,
biking, and hiking. Reflecting
on these devices, and on our
everyday experience, it is very
clear that wayfinding is not
always simply about getting to
a destination. Sometimes it’s
about what you’re going to see
on the way; some maps take us
past historic monuments or the
best views. And then there is
a temporal (perhaps circadian
or seasonal) or sometimes a
meteorological dimension that
can entirely change the way we
wish to map a location and a
route, and that can change our
perspective on the desirability of
a destination.
In that vein, I recently
designed a map for online daters
showing areas of San Francisco
in terms of nighttime inhabitation and illumination, aimed
at people concerned with being
alone at night in deserted places.
The map shows which areas of
San Francisco are dark and isolated in the evenings; you can
toggle between day and night to
see which areas are bustling in