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What does history look like? How do you draw time?
From the most ancient images to the contemporary, the line has served as the central figure in the representation of time. The linear metaphor is ubiquitous in everyday visual representations of time—in almanacs, calendars, charts, and graphs of all sorts. Even our everyday speech is filled with talk of time having a "before" and an "after" or being "long" and "short." The timeline is such a familiar part of our mental furniture that it is sometimes hard to remember that we invented it in the first place. And yet, in its modern form, the timeline is not even 250 years old. The story of what came before has never been fully told, until now. More at Princeton Press...
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Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
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Cartographies of time
2009, Princeton Architectural Press
Hardcover
in English
- First edition
1568987633 9781568987637
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Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references. 268 color illustrations; 40 b/w illustrations.
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