This is our Canada store.

Looks like you're in United States. You need a Canada address to shop on our Canada store. Go to our United States store to continue.

Showing results for "mark monmonier"

  • Bestsellers
  • Highest Rated
  • Price: Low to High
  • Title: A to Z
  • Title: Z to A
  • Date: Newest to Oldest
  • Date: Oldest to Newest
Clear All

Showing 1 - 7 of 7 Results

Adult content is visible. 


2018

EN

An updated edition of the "humorous, informative and perceptive" guide to how maps can lead us astray ( Toronto Globe and Mail).An instant classic when first published in 1991, How to Lie with Maps revealed how the choices mapmakers make—consciously or unconsciously—mean that every map inevitably presents only one of many possible stories about the places it depicts. The principles Mark Monmonier outlined back then remain true today, despite signif...

$23.19 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

Bushmanders & Bullwinkles

How Politicians Manipulate Electronic Maps and Census Data to Win Elections

2001

EN

For years Mark Monmonier, "a prose stylist of no mean ability or charm" according to the Washington Post, has delighted readers with his insightful understanding of cartography as an art and technology that is both deceptive and revealing. Now he turns his focus to the story of political cartography and the redrawing of congressional districts. His title Bushmanders and Bullwinkles combines gerrymander with the surname of the president who actively tolerated raci...

$17.59 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

Maps with the News

The Development of American Journalistic Cartography

2018

EN

"A most welcome and thorough investigation of a neglected aspect of both the history of cartography and modern cartographic practice." — MaplineMaps with the News is a lively assessment of the role of cartography in American journalism. Tracing the use of maps in American news reporting from the eighteenth century to the 1980s, Mark Monmonier explores why and how journalistic maps have achieved such importance."A w...

$17.59 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

Mapping It Out

Expository Cartography for the Humanities and Social Sciences

2015

EN

Writers know only too well how long it can take—and how awkward it can be—to describe spatial relationships with words alone. And while a map might not always be worth a thousand words, a good one can help writers communicate an argument or explanation clearly, succinctly, and effectively.In his acclaimed How to Lie with Maps, Mark Monmonier showed how maps can distort facts. In Mapping it Out: Expository Cartography for the Humanities and Social Sciences, he shows...

$19.19 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

Patents and Cartographic Inventions

A New Perspective for Map History

2017

EN

This book explores the US patent system, which helped practical minded innovators establish intellectual property rights and fulfill the need for achievement that motivates inventors and scholars alike. In this sense, the patent system was a parallel literature: a vetting institution similar to the conventional academic-scientific-technical journal insofar as the patent examiner was both editor and peer reviewer, while the patent attorney was a co-author or ghost writer. In probing evolvin...

$34.89 CAD

Clock and Compass

How John Byron Plato Gave Farmers a Real Address

2022

EN

A city guy who aspired to be a farmer, John Byron Plato took a three-month winter course in agriculture at Cornell before starting high school, which he left a year before graduation to fight in the Spanish-American War. He worked as a draftsman, ran a veneers business, patented and manufactured a parking brake for horse-drawn delivery wagons, taught school, and ran a lumber yard. In his early thirties he bought some farmland north of Denver, Colorado, and began raising Guernsey cattle, wh...

$21.69 CAD

Connections and Content

Reflections on Networks and the History of Cartography

2019

EN

Behind every great map is a network and behind every great network is a map.In Connections and Content: Reflections on Networks and the History of Cartography, cartographic cogitator Mark Monmonier shares his insights about the relationships between networks and maps. Using historical maps, he explores:Triangulation networks that established the baselines to set a map’s scaleAstronomical observations, ellipsoids, geodetic arcs, tele...

$50.39 CAD

People who read this also enjoyed

Probably Overthinking It

How to Use Data to Answer Questions, Avoid Statistical Traps, and Make Better Decisions


2023

EN

"A delightful exposition of commonly-encountered statistical fallacies and paradoxes and why they matter." —Samuel H. Preston, coauthor of Demography: Measuring and Modeling Population ProcessesAn essential guide to the ways data can improve decision making.Statistics are everywhere: in news reports, at the doctor's office, and in every sort of forecast, from the stock market to the weather. Allen B. Downey knows well that people have an innate abil...

$23.19 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

The Ideas That Rule Us

How other people's ideas rule our lives and how to change it.


2024

EN

“For much of my life, […] I was unaware that my words echoed a script I was conditioned to follow, that the lights illuminated only that which I expected to see, and that the orchestra was merely a recording that had been playing since long before my birth.” - Nathan J. MurphyIn The Ideas That Rule Us, political theory researcher, author, and technology business owner Nathan J. Murphy takes an eye-opening, multi-disciplinary deep dive into how others’ ideology, pe...

$7.39 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

Geometry of Grief

Reflections on Mathematics, Loss, and Life


2021

EN

" With poignancy and audacity, Frame builds an unexpected bridge between mathematical beauty and human sorrow, illuminating both." —Francis Su, author of Mathematics for Human FlourishingWe all know the euphoria of intellectual epiphany—the thrill of sudden understanding. But coupled with that excitement is a sense of loss: a moment of epiphany can never be repeated. In Geometry of Grief *,*mathematician Michael Frame draws on a career's worth of ...

$19.19 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus

How to Stay Smart in a Smart World

Why Human Intelligence Still Beats Algorithms

2022

EN

STAYING IN CHARGE: How do we navigate a world populated by algorithms that beat us in chess, find us romantic partners, and tell us to “turn right in 500 yards”?“Anyone worried about the age of AI will sleep better after reading this intelligent account” about the limits and dangers of technology (Publishers Weekly).Doomsday prophets of technology predict that robots will take over the world, leaving humans behind in the dust. Tech...

$31.99 CAD

also available as audiobook

Gunfighter Nation

The Myth of the Frontier in Twentieth-Century America


2024

EN

National Book Award Finalist: The "impressive" conclusion to the "magisterial trilogy on the mythology of violence in American history" ( Film Quarterly)."The myth of the Western frontier—which assumes that whites' conquest of Native Americans and the taming of the wilderness were preordained means to a progressive, civilized society—is embedded in our national psyche. U.S. troops called Vietnam 'Indian country.' President John Kennedy invoked 'New Frontier...

$17.59 CAD

or Free with Kobo Plus