I was listening to this interview with Simon Garfield on NPR a few months ago, and haven't been able to get it out of my head. It was all about maps-- the making of them, how they are varied and flawed, and how historically they are these beautiful pieces of art.
But what really stuck with me was the author's point about how different one's experience is with a map than with a GPS.
A simple point, but the author talks about how we lose the romance of maps when we turn on the GPS; we lose site of this whole unfolded huge beautiful large world that is out there-- valleys and rivers and mountains-- when we turn on the GPS we see only ourselves; a flashing dot that moves from A to B without a a larger vision of the surrounding world. As the author says, "you get the feeling, actually, 'It's all about me'... It's a terribly egocentric way of looking at the world".
Anyway, maps.
I think this interview has been on my mind partially because Violet is totally and completely into maps. She is always handing us imaginary maps when we drive places these days, and whenever we go to the zoo we spend a good chunk of our time there just staring at the zoo map board. When we get home, she unfolds her paper map and gets out some little people to trot along the yellow trail line, and shows how they can go from the goats to the bears and see the penguins and snakes along the way (but if they want to see the giraffes and elephants, they'll have to go a different way).
I don't really know how she got into maps. Maybe it started with India a few years ago, when we got her a playground ball that looked like a globe, and showed her Seattle and then India. Then we started talking about other places, like Berkeley and Chico, and then Wisconsin and Whidbey Island.
Well, long story short, Violet made her own map at preschool yesterday. I think it's somewhere in between the romantic idea of a traditional all-encompasing map, and an egocentric (haha) GPS. But, well, such is the mind of a 4 year old.
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