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Above are some of my previous and ongoing engagements with cartography and geovisualization methods. I am particularly inspired by feminist, Black, and other critical cartography interventions and approaches which have made room for more plural, playful, and participatory expressions of space. Following feminist cartographic and multiscalar assertions, I believe that mapping women’s daily lives can offer insight into the intimate, lived, and material spatial realities of power and make visible the ways in which women navigate and disrupt urban processes. Building on Black studies engagements with cartography (see Brand 2001, Lethabo-King 2016, McKittrick 2016, and others), I think that key to fostering more just cartographic representations requires thinking about cartography more diversely, i.e. interrogating its theoretical formations, promoting alternative engagements with mapping, and abandoning conventions that acts as gatekeepers to cartography practices.

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