Department of History Chair Awarded Public Scholar Fellowship
Susan Schulten will use funding to complete book about America and maps
罢丑别听听has awarded a Public Scholar Fellowship to听, professor in and chair of the 91桃色鈥檚听. As part of her fellowship, Schulten received $50,400 in funding to support time away from teaching so that she can complete her book 鈥淎 History of America in 100 Maps.鈥 This is the second year of funding for this particular fellowship, which was created to broaden the audience for the humanities beyond universities.
Schulten鈥檚 book, which uses 100 maps to illuminate American history from 1492 to the present, explains why maps were made, why they mattered and how they help us understand the past. It will be published in 2018 by the University of Chicago Press in a joint publication with the听. Schulten will take time off in fall 2017 and winter 2018 to finish the book and may take a second trip to London to research additional maps.
The interest in old maps, Schulten says, exploded in the early 1900s 鈥 a time when people had access to disposable income and the interest in antiquities was on the rise. Today, old maps still have a healthy trade value, selling for anywhere from $10 to $10 million 鈥 the latter amount being what the Library of Congress paid for Martin Waldseem眉ller's听听that 鈥渘amed鈥 America.
鈥淚 have long been interested in the history of cartography and the way people used maps to make sense of their circumstances,鈥 Schulten says. 鈥淥ld maps are among the most compelling windows into the past. As a historian, I鈥檓 always searching for clues to the way that people in the past lived their lives.鈥
Old maps, she adds, capture the struggles of discovery and the effort to chart terrain. Centuries later, they also would be used to organize information, consider spatial relationships and to convince others of something, such as settling an argument having to do with land or space.
Schulten鈥檚 book is organized into eight chronological chapters, each featuring a set of maps and a 1,500-word essay that frames the major themes of each era.
The chapters include:
- 1507-1580: Contact and European discovery
- 1580-1683: Settlement and conflict
- 1680-1783: Imperial and indigenous rivalries
- 1783-1837: A tentative nation
- 1835-1860: Movement, mobility, and inequality
- 1860-1910: War and reconstruction, south and west
- 1875-1945: Stewardship at home and abroad
- 1950-2000: Maps for a mass society
In her project proposal, Schulten explained how she would recast five centuries of American history through maps, primarily focusing on the area that became the United States. She says most of the maps in her book are drawn from the British Library.
鈥淏eginning with one of the first maps to identify the New World, the library houses a wealth of unseen treasures that have tremendous potential to connect with readers鈥 she says. 鈥淏y asking how they were made 鈥 and explaining why they mattered 鈥 I reframe the history of America in a way that is both imaginative and visually engaging.鈥
She also discusses General William Sherman鈥檚 commissioning of several听听during the Civil War 鈥 one of which she calls 鈥渋nnovative鈥 for the way it labeled not only rivers and roads, but population, livestock, crops and more.
Schulten is the author of听鈥鈥 and 鈥,鈥 and is a coauthor of the forthcoming 鈥Constructing the American Past: A Sourcebook of a People鈥檚 History.鈥
