TY - JOUR
T1 - Maps and Meaning: Reading the Map of the Holy Land
AU - Collins-Kreiner, Noga
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - The research methods of hermeneutics and semiotics were used to analyze maps of the Holy Land. The main conclusion of this study is how those methods could help us to read and understand maps. Othe issues of concern are which religious elements actually appear and their form of representation in the range of maps. Narratives identified on the various maps were the holy Christian narrative- which proved the most dominant, the Jewish narrative and the Muslim narrative that was rarely found in the maps, even in those with a Palestinian narrative. A ubiquitous finding was disregarded for political issues, although the maps' messages allow the map-user to draw conclusions about ideology, images, and conflicts
AB - The research methods of hermeneutics and semiotics were used to analyze maps of the Holy Land. The main conclusion of this study is how those methods could help us to read and understand maps. Othe issues of concern are which religious elements actually appear and their form of representation in the range of maps. Narratives identified on the various maps were the holy Christian narrative- which proved the most dominant, the Jewish narrative and the Muslim narrative that was rarely found in the maps, even in those with a Palestinian narrative. A ubiquitous finding was disregarded for political issues, although the maps' messages allow the map-user to draw conclusions about ideology, images, and conflicts
UR - https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1849&context=tqr
M3 - Article
SN - 2160-3715
VL - 10
SP - 257
EP - 275
JO - The Qualitative Report
JF - The Qualitative Report
IS - 2
ER -