{"objectType":"Post","type":"Article","actorId":"@filmclub@kwln.social","actor":{"id":"@filmclub@kwln.social","type":"Person","name":"Film Club","icon":"https://kwln.social/images/user.svg","url":"https://kwln.social/users/%40filmclub%40kwln.social","inbox":"https://kwln.social/users/%40filmclub%40kwln.social/inbox","outbox":"https://kwln.social/users/%40filmclub%40kwln.social/outbox","server":"@kwln.social"},"title":"On the Pleasures of Old Maps","body":"<p>Old maps are interesting for two different reasons, and it's worth separating them.</p>\n<p>The first reason is historical: old maps show you what people thought they knew, which is a record of the limits of knowledge at a specific moment. The coastline that ends in conjecture. The interior labeled 'terra incognita'. The routes that reflect a specific empire's economic interests, not the actual shape of things. Maps are arguments, and old maps make the argument visible.</p>\n<p>The second reason is aesthetic: old maps are often beautiful in ways that modern maps are not. The cartouche. The decorative sea monsters. The way the typography sits on the projection. The hand-lettering that makes every name feel specific and earned.</p>\n<p>Modern maps are accurate in ways old maps weren't. They are less interesting to look at.</p>\n<p>I have a collection of reproductions that I return to for both reasons: for the historical limits they expose, and for the aesthetic ambition they represent.</p>\n","wordCount":155,"charCount":967,"replyCount":0,"reactCount":0,"reactPreview":null,"reactSummary":null,"shareCount":0,"image":"file:6a45c7ca7f6ed5545befa514@kwln.social","attachments":[],"tags":[],"createdAt":"2026-07-02T02:07:06.682Z","updatedAt":"2026-07-02T02:07:06.687Z","id":"post:6a45c7ca7f6ed5545befa517@kwln.social","url":"https://kwln.social/posts/post:6a45c7ca7f6ed5545befa517@kwln.social","server":"@kwln.social","summary":"<p>Old maps are interesting for two different reasons, and it's worth separating them.</p>\n<p>The first reason is historical: old maps show you what people thought they knew, which is a record of the limits of knowledge at a specific moment. The coastline that ends in conjecture. The interior labeled 'terra incognita'. The routes that reflect a specific empire's economic interests, not the actual shape of things. Maps are arguments, and old maps make the argument visible.</p>\n","textPreview":"Old maps are interesting for two different reasons, and it's worth separating them. The first reason is historical: old maps show you what people thought they knew, which is a record of the limits of…","signature":"AB5LbzQlPT+6wHNixQi5GiecU5frvjCV+r4F7gZ31W0NcHdUFS6Gi8pi0F2AEp6rkapkP6dqIfaC0dlG/NZtfqclr+DWW55WwXdZrpiWFLJucZYWAITMIguakNaALhxStxFKsbQYpWNZoQrgggLPUVoIR4j8mcJOiFtvXNdXlnOZVyhndzn/mCmXkqEO7jS9/RXA5Lb7dsTaOHqXea6S7cnEmhncpKa42jXXbs6M5TpPQt7pjJvS3dXx7yA9WhxrZVD7FkRdL5FAQCkFCr5KPVKNvx4lpn4DvjiEXnvVSJ4Rxib4kNBNUbN2FwJ+4uZpMfNWLuXVK2xTSfgijeWoMw==","canReply":false,"canReact":false,"publishedAt":"2026-07-02T02:07:06.682Z","featuredImage":"https://kwln.social/files/file:6a45c7ca7f6ed5545befa514@kwln.social","myReact":null,"reactCounts":[]}