Deep_map Deep_map

Deep map - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Machiavellian, Abstract, Abyss, Acute, Arcane, Arch, Ardent, Baritone, Bass, Benthos

Deep map refers to an emerging practical method of intensive topographical exploration, popularised by author William Least Heat-Moon with his book PrairyErth: A Deep Map. (1991).

A deep map work most often takes the form of engaged documentary writing of literary quality; although it can equally well be done in long-form on radio and does not preclude the combination of writing with photography and illustration. Its subject is a particular place, usually quite small and limited, and usually rural.

Some call the approach 'vertical travel writing', while others compare it to the eclectic approaches of 18th & early 19th century antiquarian topographers or to the psychogeographic excusions of the early Situationist International.

However, a deep map goes beyond simple landscape/history-based topographical writing - to include and interweave autobiography, archeology, stories, memories, folklore, traces, reportage, weathers, interviews, natural history, science & intuition. In its best form, the resulting work arrives at a subtle, multilayered and 'deep' map of a small area of the earth.

In North America it is a method now often claimed by those interested in bioregionalism. The best known U.S. examples are Wallace Stegner's Wolf Willow (1962) and William Least Heat-Moon's PrairyErth (1991).

In Britain it is used by those who deploy the terms 'sense of place' and 'local distinctiveness'. BBC Radio 4 has recently undertaken several series of radio documentaries that are deep maps. These are inspired by the 'sense of place' work of the Common Ground (http://www.commonground.org.uk/) organisation.

Example Usage of Deep

AdrianPFoskett: The big “Flaw” in Law of Attraction... (this is really Deep stuff)...http://bit.ly/6evZx
Uicq: lookimg for some fun after long week of Deep freezing in the desert... any one intersted?
triplenickel: Audio slideshow: Deep space X-rays http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8404574.stm #science #space
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