"There is no such thing as empty space on a map." This declaration, though exaggerated, indicates Harley's view that the "silences" on maps, as he distinctively termed them, could be as meaningful as the geographical and other data actually drawn or written on them. "Assuming the world to be a place where human choice is exercised," Harley contended, "the absence of something must be seen to be as worthy of historical investigation as is its presence. So it is with cartography".
Harley's interest was in the stories that maps do not tell. His interest grew out of his encyclopedic knowledge of cartographic history and his extensive and eclectic reading in subjects outside the field, including postmodernist literary criticism and social theory.
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