Radical Cartography Audiobook By William Rankin cover art

Radical Cartography

How Changing Our Maps Can Change Our World

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Radical Cartography

By: William Rankin
Narrated by: Tim Fannon
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$8.99/mo. after 3 months. Cancel anytime. Offer ends July 5, 2026 at 11:59pm PT.

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A thought-provoking exploration of how maps shape our understanding of the world

Cartographer and historian William Rankin argues that it's time to reimagine what a map can be and how it can be used. Maps are not neutral visualizations of facts. They are innately political, defining how the world is divided, what becomes visible and what stays hidden, and whose voices are heard. What matters isn't just the topics or the data, but how maps make arguments about how the world works. And the consequences are enormous. A map's visual argument can change how cities are designed and how rivers flow, how wars are fought and how land claims are settled, how children learn about race and how colonialism becomes a habit of mind. Maps don't just show us information—they help construct our world.

Brimming with vibrant maps, including many "radical" maps created by Rankin himself and by other cutting-edge mapmakers, Radical Cartography exposes the consequences of how maps represent boundaries, layers, people, projections, color, scale, and time. Challenging the map as a tool of the status quo, Rankin empowers listeners to embrace three unexpected values for the future of cartography: uncertainty, multiplicity, and subjectivity. Changing the tools—changing the maps—can change the questions we ask, the answers we accept, and the world we build.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2025 William Rankin (P)2026 Tantor Media
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I have both a hardcover and audio copy of this book and I tried to read them together. I found the actual hardcover copy of the book much more intelligible than the audio version. The subject matter is so visual that it's important to be able to actually see what the narrator is describing. The hardcover version was quite visually beautiful and impressive. It is *very* academic. It's perfect for anyone doing a deep theoretical dive into any social science field. The conclusion does an excellent job of summing up the main points--it functions almost like the abstract of a research study and if time is limited, I would recommend skimming through and focusing on the conclusion, which does a great job up summarizing the main points. It is overall a very impressive book and gives me greater appreciation for cartography as a discipline. I think the audio version by itself would be pretty hard to make sense of (which is why I gave the audio version only 4 stars as opposed to 5), though listening to just the conclusion might be worthwhile. Overall, if the topic is appealing, I would recommend getting an actual physical copy of the book as opposed to either an audio or e-reader version, since detail can be harder to see with an e-reader, requiring a lot of finessing of settings that interrupts the flow of the text. So if you really are interested in the topic, I would recommend springing for a hardcover copy, as this provides the best view of the various maps. If you don't have a deep academic interest in the topic, then the conclusion may be enough to let you know what the book focuses on.

Very academic

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