A series of free public
talks promoted by two iconic Wellington institutions will ask new questions
about how to use maps in innovative ways.
Victoria University of
Wellington and the National Library are partnering for the second year in a row
to deliver a series of thought-provoking talks. This year the focus is on how
mapping can be applied to the study of people, geography, the weather, and even
literary works.
Victoria University
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Engagement) Professor Frazer Allan says the event
demonstrates the value of the partnership between Victoria and the National
Library.
“By collaborating with
the National Library we are able to share the expertise of our academics with a
wider audience and encourage debate on some of the big questions facing New
Zealand. Our location in Wellington, the capital city, keeps us close to
agencies like the National Library and provides a strong foundation for
Victoria’s programme of civic engagement.”
National Librarian Bill
Macnaught says both organisations are strongly committed to sharing knowledge
about contemporary issues of importance, and to working together to engage and
inspire researchers, writers and others.
“Bringing our expertise
together makes for a powerful examination of ideas, movements, and
technological changes that affect the place we live in. The talks engage the
wider issues of what mapping means in practice, how it has changed dramatically
with the introduction of digital tools, and how social, demographic and
geographic changes can be tracked and understood with maps.”
The first talk by
Victoria academics is on Thursday 21 April and examines the very topical issue
of forced refugee movements in Europe, Asia and the Pacific. These movements
cross borders and in some cases change the map.
Victoria Political
Science and International Relations senior lecturer Dr Kate McMillan will use a
series of interactive maps to look at the drivers of forced migration in the
Asia-Pacific region in the 21st century.
She will be joined by
History senior lecturer Dr Simone Gigliotti who will examine institutional
approaches to mapping the displacement of refugees in 1945 to 1946, and 2015 to 2016. She poses the question: “To
what extent can maps, with their humanitarian, mobile and visual geographical
stories, inspire empathy and political interventions across time and place?”
This year’s theme is
related to the major exhibition at the National Library,
Unfolding the Map, which explores the history and the future of
cartography in New Zealand.
Other issues being
examined by Victoria staff in the series are: the future of maps; weather maps
and how to find a storm; literary cartography—the landscapes that authors
create; the growing field of digital humanities and the ways histories are
constructed; making sense of spatial data; the use of mapping to protect
species such as in marine reserves; and the everyday use of digital maps and global
positioning systems by social networks.
What: Mapping Forced Migration; and Humanity
on the Move
Who: Kate McMillan and Simone Gigliotti
When: Thursday 21 April, 5.30pm-6.45pm
Where: National Library, Molesworth Street, Wellington
When: Thursday 21 April, 5.30pm-6.45pm
Where: National Library, Molesworth Street, Wellington
Other talks during
May:
5 May
The Changing Face of
Aotearoa
Kevin Norton, Senior
lecturer physical geography
11 May
The Future of Maps
Aaron Jordan, Topography
Group Manager at Land Information New Zealand (LINZ)
17 May
How to Find a Storm:
Maps of the Weather
Professor James Renwick
and Erick Brenstrum.
26 May
Telling new stories with old maps
Dr Sydney Shep, Wai-te-Ata Press
Future talks will be
promoted on the National Library website https://natlib.govt.nz/events
For more information contact Mike Smith, Department of
Internal Affairs, on 027 807 6741 or michaels.smith@dia.govt.nz.
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