New Chicago
- Title:
- New Chicago
- Alternate Title:
- New Chicago
- Collection:
- Persuasive Maps: PJ Mode Collection
- Creator:
- Bunge, William
- Date:
- 1988
- Posted Date:
- 2017-04-14
- ID Number:
- 2155.03
- File Name:
- PJM_2155_03.jpg
- Style/Period:
- 1960 - Present
- Subject:
- Disaster/Health/Environment
Politics & Government
Pictorial - Measurement:
- page 20 x 14 (centimeters, height x width)
- Notes:
- This is the third in a series of maps by William Bunge, a radical geographer and peace activist, detailing the devastation that would befall Chicago if it were hit by a single 20-megaton nuclear weapon. ID ##2155.01-03. This map shows "the geography of New Chicago,which gradually fades away only after thousands of years," with "rings of the dead, blinded, crazed, dying-of-radiation-sickness finally giving way to the largest ring, the ring of the starving." Graphic symbols represent each of these conditions. "One of the key elements of Bunge's 'New Chicago' map is its horrific depiction of sickness and insanity, tracking migration patterns of the 'sick, maimed and insane,' and complete with arrows tracking 'marauding zombies' and 'invading zombies.'" Barney 2015, 206-07.
William Bunge is a colorful and fascinating figure in the history of post-World War II cartography: “spatial scientist,” “cult hero,” “disciplinary bad boy” and “radical geographic crusader.” Barney 2015, 192; see generally ibid. 192-214. As a young academic at Wayne State University in the early 1960s, Bunge moved to Fitzgerald, a one-square mile ghetto neighborhood of Detroit. The social turmoil of the time, particularly the 1967 Detroit riots, led him to undertake an extensive "democratic as opposed to an elitist expedition" of the neighborhood. Barnes 2011, 713. His work, eventually published as Fitzgerald: Geography of a Revolution (1971), is described - even by one of its enthusiastic supporters - as "a tortured book, controversial, angry, partial, withering, and hyperbolic. . . . at the polar end of traditional academic scholarship." Ibid. 712. See, e.g., ID #2156.01, “Direction of Money Transfers in Metropolitan Detroit.”
Bunge was denied tenure by Wayne State as a result of obscenity charges. In 1968 the House Un-American Activities Committee blacklisted him, along with other "radicals," from speaking on American campuses. (His name was listed between H. Rap Brown and Stokely Carmichael.) At that point, he moved to Canada and became a "nomad cartographer," seeking visiting lectureships, working with underground publishers - and driving a cab in Toronto. Barney 195; Barnes 714.
In 1982, he produced the first version of his "Nuclear War Atlas," ID #2364. This work is in the form of a large poster, folded down to a pamphlet-sized 5 x 8 inches, and it was distributed at peace rallies and demonstrations. Barnes 200. Bunge greatly expanded the number of maps (from 28 to 57) and the supporting text for the eventual publication of the Atlas in book form in 1988. See ID ##2188.01-.09. Bunge wrote in the Preface to the book (at ix), "Hopefully, at last my fellow revolutionaries will show some keen interest in conducting revolution without annihilation." Three of the maps in the collection from the Nuclear War Atlas are based on Bunge's earlier Detroit research: ID #2188.06, Children's Automobile "Accidents" in Detroit; ID #2188.08, Detroit's Infant Mortality Compared with Foreign Countries, and ID #2188.09, Region of Rat-Bitten Babies.
For further information on the Collector’s Notes and a Feedback/Contact Link, see https://persuasivemaps.library.cornell.edu/content/about-collection-personal-statement and https://persuasivemaps.library.cornell.edu/content/feedback-and-contact - Source:
- Bunge, William. 1988. Nuclear War Atlas. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
- Repository:
- Private Collection of PJ Mode
- Format:
- Image
- Rights:
- For important information about copyright and use, see http://persuasivemaps.library.cornell.edu/copyright.