A Hermeneutic Introduction to Maps

Auteurs-es

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.5195/errs.2021.569

Mots-clés :

Configuration, Distanciation, Carte, Orientation, Texte.

Résumé

Le but de cet article est de montrer qu’une approche ricœurienne de l’espace et du lieu n’aboutit pas à une topologie seulement ontologique, à la façon de Heidegger, mais qu’elle est aussi en mesure de poser des questions d’ordre géographique et cartographique. Notre démonstration se fera en deux étapes. On montrera tout d’abord comment l’herméneutique ricœurienne du long détour permet de passer d’une considération transcendantale – donc vide – du lieu comme condition a priori de toute expérience à une conception plurielle des lieux comme enjeux de l’interprétation. Puis on étudiera comment la tâche d’interpréter les lieux implique des processus de distanciation et d’objectivation, à travers lesquels les lieux peuvent être constitués comme objets de recherche scientifique et critique. Les cartes géographiques seront enfin abordées comme des moyens spécifiques d’interpréter les lieux, à mi-chemin entre texte et image, sujet et objet, science et art.

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Publié-e

2021-12-15

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