Bill Rankin
The physical and earth sciences since the mid-19th century; military, industrial, and governmental science; history of cartography; science and architecture; visual studies; environmental history
Bill Rankin’s research focuses on the relationship between science and space, from the territorial scale of states and globalization down to the scale of individual buildings. He is particularly interested in mapping, the environmental sciences and technology, architecture and urbanism, and methodological problems of digital scholarship, spatial history, and geographic analysis (including GIS).
His prize-winning first book, After the Map: Cartography, Navigation, and the Transformation of Territory in the Twentieth Century (University of Chicago Press, 2016), is a history of the mapping sciences in the twentieth century. It tracks the shift from the god’s-eye view of the paper map to the embedded experience of GPS, and it analyzes the role of mapping both in the macropolitics of US global power and in the micropolitics of everyday subjectivity and the unexpected uses of new technologies. More information is available on the book’s website, www.afterthemap.info.
In addition to his historical work, Bill is also an award-winning cartographer, and his maps have been published and exhibited widely in the US, Europe, and Asia. Most of this work is available on his website, www.radicalcartography.net, maintained since 2003.
Global Catastrophe since 1750
Cartography, Territory, and Identity
Geography and History
Problems in the History of Science
After the Map: Cartography, Navigation, and the Transformation of Territory in the Twentieth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.
Winner of the 2017 Sidney Edelstein Prize for best book from the Society for the History of Technology, the 2017 SSHA President’s Book Award for best first book from the Social Science History Association, and two Yale awards: the 2017 Gaddis Smith International Book Prize from the Yale MacMillan Center and the 2018 Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Prize in the humanities.
Long-form reviews in The American Historical Review, Diplomatic History, Reviews in History, and The New Atlantis. Interviews with the Toynbee Prize Foundation, New Books Network, Time to Eat the Dogs, and YaleNews. Also reviewed in Imago Mundi, Isis, Technology and Culture, Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, Historical Geography, American Association of Geographers Review of Books, Cartographic Perspectives, Southeastern Geographer, The Geographical Magazine (UK), The Globe Journal (Australia), Tekniikan Waheita (in Swedish), Historische Zeitschrift (in German), and H-Soz-Kult (in German).
“Breaking Scientific Networks” (co-edited with Dániel Margócsy). Special issue, Social Studies of Science 47 (June 2017).
“The Accuracy Trap: The Values and Meaning of Algorithmic Mapping, from Mineral Extraction to Climate Change.” Environment and History (online before print, 2020). Winner of the 2021 Joel A. Tarr Envirotech Prize for best article on the history of technology and the environment in the last 18 months (awarded by SHOT, presented at ASEH).
“Mapping Time in the Twentieth (and Twenty-First) Century.” In Time in Maps: From the Age of Discovery to Our Digital Era, edited by Kären Wigen and Caroline Winterer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2020.
“Walls, Borders, and Boundaries in World History.” Long-form conversation with five other scholars. American Historical Review 122 (Dec 2017): 1501–1553.
“Zombie Projects, Negative Networks, and Multigenerational Science: The Temporality of the International Map of the World.” Social Studies of Science (June 2017; online 2016): 353–375.
“Global Positioning System.” In Cartography in the Twentieth Century, edited by Mark Monmonier. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.
“The Geography of Radionavigation and the Politics of Intangible Artifacts.” Technology and Culture 55 (July 2014): 622–674. Winner of the 2016 Maurice Daumas Prize for the best article in “the history of technology in any period of the past or in any part of the world” and the 2015 Bernard S. Finn IEEE History Prize for the best paper on the history of electrotechnology (power, electronics, telecommunications, and computer science).
“The ‘Person Skilled in the Art’ is Really Quite Conventional: U.S. Patent Drawings and the Persona of the Inventor, 1870-2005.” in Making and Unmaking Intellectual Property: Creative Production in Legal and Cultural Perspective, edited by Mario Biagioli, Peter Jaszi, and Martha Woodmansee, 55–75. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.
“Visualizing Disciplines, Transforming Boundaries.” Review of Atlas of Science by Katy Börner. American Scientist 99 (May 2011): 254–256.
“The Epistemology of the Suburbs: Knowledge, Production, and Corporate Laboratory Design.” Critical Inquiry (Summer 2010): 771–806.
“Infrastructure and the International Governance of Economic Development, 1950–1965.” In Internationalization of Infrastructures, edited by Jean-François Auger, Jan Jaap Bouma, and Rolf Künneke, 61–75. Delft University of Technology, 2009.
“The Reification of Sound: Recording Technology and the Changing Ontology of Music.” Open Space 8/9 (Fall 2006–Spring 2007).
“Seismic Isolation Enhancements for Initial and Advanced LIGO” (coauthor). Classical and Quantum Gravity 21 (Special Issue, 7 March 2004): s915–s921. (Erdős number: 6)
“The Slave Insurance Market.” Foreign Policy 222 (Jan/Feb 2017): 22–23.
Map: “The Human Hemisphere.” In The Best American Infographics 2016, edited by Gareth Cook with an introduction by Robert Krulwich. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016.
“Redrawing the Map.” ArchitectureBoston 18, no. 3 (Summer 2015): 42–45.
Maps: “Actual European Discoveries,” “The Midwest,” and “French Kisses.” In The Best American Infographics 2014, edited by Gareth Cook with an introduction by Nate Silver. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014.
Maps of global agricultural land since 1700. In Food: An Atlas, edited by Darin Jensen. Oakland: Guerrilla Cartography, 2013.
“Cartography and the Reality of Boundaries.” Perspecta 42 (Spring 2010): 42–45.
“Urban Legends.” Boston Review 35 (Nov/Dec 2010): 5–6.
Maps of US agriculture, demographics, suicide, and subways. In Mapping America: Exploring the Continent, edited by Fritz Kessler and Frank Jacobs. London: Black Dog, 2010.
“Landscapes of Specialization.” In Ecological Urbanism, edited by Mohsen Mostafavi and Gareth Doherty, 502–503. Baden: Lars Müller, 2010.
Maps for “Arctic Land Grab,” National Geographic Vol. 215, No. 5 (May 2009): 108–124.
Maps: “My Cities,” “We The People?” and “The Cargo Chain,” in Experimental Geography: Radical Approaches to Landscape, Cartography, and Urbanism, edited by Nato Thompson, 124–129. Brooklyn: Melville House, 2008.
For more, see www.radicalcartography.net.
Harvard University, A.M. in History of Science
Rice University, Bachelor of Architecture
Rice University, B.A. in Architecture and Civil Engineering, summa cum laude