The article explores the environmental content of urban modernity in a nineteenth-century Latin American capital city through a comparative analysis of the cartographic silencing of "nature" in four versions of two urban plans of Bogota dated 1797, 1853, 1891, and 1896. Following Harley, it reads Cabrer's, Dussan's, and Clavijo's maps as political albeit also technical-devices whose silences are revealing of a "subconscious mentalite" about urban modernity and its relation to nature. Following Colombian urban ecologists and Bogota recent city planners, it understands "nature" as a network of ecosystemic relations (Ecological Main Structure, EMS) whose original cornerstones are the Eastern Mountain Ridges (Cerros Orientales), the savanna (Sabana), and the hydrologic systems of rivers and wetlands. The cartographic analysis tackles the shifting representation of these components through time. The article relates that the graphic reduction of wetlands, the loss of visual importance of the Cerros Orientales, and the literal disappearance of the Sabana from the city maps are cartographic indicators of the process of building a "modern" city as something divorced from its ecological structure. Silencing nature became a noisy weapon to domesticate it.

Gallini, S., Osorio, C.C. (2015). Modernity and the Silencing of Nature in Nineteenth-Century Maps of Bogotá. JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY, 14(3), 91-125 [10.1353/lag.2015.0028].

Modernity and the Silencing of Nature in Nineteenth-Century Maps of Bogotá

Gallini, Stefania;
2015-01-01

Abstract

The article explores the environmental content of urban modernity in a nineteenth-century Latin American capital city through a comparative analysis of the cartographic silencing of "nature" in four versions of two urban plans of Bogota dated 1797, 1853, 1891, and 1896. Following Harley, it reads Cabrer's, Dussan's, and Clavijo's maps as political albeit also technical-devices whose silences are revealing of a "subconscious mentalite" about urban modernity and its relation to nature. Following Colombian urban ecologists and Bogota recent city planners, it understands "nature" as a network of ecosystemic relations (Ecological Main Structure, EMS) whose original cornerstones are the Eastern Mountain Ridges (Cerros Orientales), the savanna (Sabana), and the hydrologic systems of rivers and wetlands. The cartographic analysis tackles the shifting representation of these components through time. The article relates that the graphic reduction of wetlands, the loss of visual importance of the Cerros Orientales, and the literal disappearance of the Sabana from the city maps are cartographic indicators of the process of building a "modern" city as something divorced from its ecological structure. Silencing nature became a noisy weapon to domesticate it.
2015
Gallini, S., Osorio, C.C. (2015). Modernity and the Silencing of Nature in Nineteenth-Century Maps of Bogotá. JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY, 14(3), 91-125 [10.1353/lag.2015.0028].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11590/493742
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 10
social impact