Description
About the Author
Catherine Gibson is a historian of modern Eastern Europe and the Russian Empire. She is currently a Research Fellow in the School of Theology & Religious Studies at the University of Tartu. She received her PhD from the European University Institute in 2019. She is co-editor of The Palgrave Handbook of Slavic Languages, Borders, and Identities and her research has appeared in the journals Past & Present, Journal of Social History, Journal of History Geography, and Nationalities Papers.
Reviews
highly relevant * Katja Wezel, H-Soz-Kult *
In this book, Geographies of Nationhood, Catherine Gibson presents a piece of intellectual history that analyzes how these societies produced and used ethnographic maps of what is today Latvia and Estonia...The book should therefore become an important read for many scholars and students of Baltic and east European studies. * Vasilijus Safronovas, Journal Of Baltic Studies *
Catherine Gibson's Geographies of Nationhood takes the reader on a journey through the intricate history of ethnographic mapmaking in the Baltic provinces of the Russian Empire from the 1840s until the formation of the independent Baltic states following World War I...The book opens up a fresh window into the history of the Baltic region, but it has wider lessons to teach. * Katja Bruisch, Isis Book Review *
Catherine Gibson's carefully researched and original book opens new avenues for analysing the history of the Baltic littoral. Timely published in a year when knowledge and understanding about Russia's western borderlands is much needed, it is...a good read for students and will be of great interest to historians of science and cartography, as well as of Central Europe and the Russian Empire. * Charlotte Henze, Slavonic and East European Review *
In Geographies of Nationhood Catherine Gibson brings a little-studied part of the world into view and along the way makes a powerful case for the agency of maps in shaping that world. * Valerie A. Kivelson, Imago Mundi *
Gibson's monograph is nuanced in its interventions, lucid and uniquely accessible in its prose. This is a unique combination that makes the work desirable and necessary reading for specialists in the history of empire or the history of cartography, those interested in the Baltic provinces, or students at the graduate and undergraduate levels. * Ismael Biyashev, H-Sci-Med-Tech *
This study is a valuable addition to the historiography of the empire, and a strong candidate for translation and inclusion in the Novoe Literature Obozrenie series on the history of the Imperial Russian borderlands. * Anton Kotenko, Lithuanian Historical Studies *
This study has much to teach us about wider themes of Baltic regional and national histories, international and inter-ethnic collaborations in the age of empire, and the evolution of local self-perception in a contested borderland * Stephen Badalyan Riegg, Canadian-American Slavic Studies *
This monograph deserves attention not only from historians of cartography and the Baltic region, but also from specialists of empire, nation, as well as transnational and intellectual histories. * Stephen Badalyan Riegg, Canadian-American Slavic Studies *
Awards
Winner of Winner, 2023 Baltic Geopolitics Network Publication Prize, University of Cambridge.
Book Information
ISBN 9780192844323
Author Catherine Gibson
Format Hardback
Page Count 288
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 710g
Dimensions(mm) 241mm * 161mm * 21mm