Shortly after the first photograph of Earth from space entered our collective imaginary in 1946, Sputnik was launched and the process of satellization (to use Baudrillard’s term) began. The fruit of this historical period was a new privileged view—higher than the aerial inaugurated by the airplane. Perhaps the most riveting aspect of using Google Earth is its method of positioning the user at the scale of the global, in a very literal sense of the term. Staring at the digitized planetary representation on screen, we hover for a few seconds in this privileged visual space before “zooming” into our favorite haunts and then “zooming” back out again. It is these exercises in scale that make Google Earth such an interesting object of study. We realize, with this program, that we not only now possess a “global” consciousness and map at the planetary scale, but that the global image itself is interactive—capable of being manipulated for the purposes of both diversion and action. What Google Earth demands from its users is an investigation of how—through these exercises in vision—it complicates issues of scale that have become so central to contemporary cartographic thought.

Google Earth defaults to a setting of 11,001.001 kilometers above earth—enough of a distance to appreciate the curved contours of the blue planet, its edges apparently aglow against the starry darkness of outer space. Provided by NASA, it is a visually pleasing image. We can see where land ends and water begins—all the rest is hidden. This perspective is what cartographers refer to as the “God’s Eye View”; it is a kind of visual objectivity long practiced by those attempting to craft aerial representations of the Earth. One has to assume this positionality in order to create globes, atlases—those cartographic reproductions that we have long been accustomed to consult. But accusations of appropriating the “God’s Eye View” emanate from critical geographers seeking to demystify the objectifying tendencies of the map. Donna Haraway, in her elaboration of the possibilities of a feminist science, warns us against the “God-trick,” against the desire to assume disembodied positions of “objectivity” (a term she ultimately reappropriates for her project). De Certeau, in “Walking the City,” makes a similar theoretical move. Beginning his essay on the 110th floor of the WTC—a God’s Eye view in itself—he rejects this position in favor of the ground and appropriately shifts the entire essay to this level of analysis.

What happens at the 110th floor of the WTC (or at the dizzying altitudes of Google Earth) is an arresting of the complexity below. De Certeau sees what the cartographers and philosophers of geometric space see: “the technological system of coherent and totalizing space that is ‘linked’ and simultaneous” (102). Peering at NASA’s globe is an act that unifies: you hold the entire planet in the space of the computer screen. De Certeau finds this unifying act problematic; it is a capitalist spatial logic that dictates universals in order to facilitate production: Universal Time just as much as unified, universal space. At too high an altitude, we totalize. Or, to take a phenomenological perspective from Bachelard, at high altitudes we also—in a parallel conceptual move—minaturize. Minaturization, for Bachelard, reflects a desire for possession. Those aerial perspectives from the window of an airplane (similarly represented at various altitudes of GoogleEarth) minaturize the landscape: houses, cars, sidewalks, streets: all become rendered as tiny pieces of a large puzzle. Trees in Google Earth look like broccoli. At just under a kilometer, Google Earth turns the world into a plaything, phenomenologically diminishing the terror of such heights.

In a postmodern era of “fragmentation,” it would seem that a bit of unification—anything capable of rendering some sort of picture of the totality (as Jameson desires) would be a welcome analytic. Jameson writes of the fragmented experiences generated by airplane travel: disjointed movements from place to place, the lateral homogeneous space of airport terminals that does nothing to diminish this spatial confusion. Google Earth seems, in its “fly over” mode to reinsert the spaces obliterated by air travel. Moving Google Earth from “Durham” to “Detroit” takes us on the route between those two locales, a route that highlights the continuity of the space. Moving from LA to NY reminds us that the two global cities are actually located on the same continental space—a geographic fact that becomes obscured in high-speed plane (and rocket) travel. By using the idea of “continuity,” we do not mean to suggest a homogenous, unified space; rather, in following critical analysis of “scale” we aim more to understand how Google Earth—with its ability to convey a continuous sense of space—potentially disrupts hierarchical notions of scale.

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Many theorists argue that scale emerges with the capitalist organization of space. Neil Smith notes how scale is, despite its seemingly neutral status as a method of representation, socially-produced (62). To that end, scale becomes a way by which “spatial difference ‘takes place’…” so that “the production of geographical scale is the site of potentially intense political struggle” (62). Scale is political. In its temporary “resolution of…[the] contradiction between competition and cooperation,” it marks out boundaries at which exchange can and cannot take place (64). In effect, scale freezes political action at particular sites (i.e. “the local”). The concept of “jumping scales”—a popular tool of scalar transgression—involves the expansion (or leakage) of political acts, concerns, etc. out of their assigned “spheres” and into more higher-order scales (i.e. the nation-state). An example of how scales jump, and one that feminist geographers often make note of, is abortion. Starting at the scale of the body, this issue works its way out of the seemingly limited space of the individual to the level of national legislation. The personal is political, when you jump scale.

To return to Google Earth, the question becomes: does Google Earth facilitate a jumping of scales? If, as Smith et. al contend, scale is socially-produced, does Google Earth provide a visualization of the ease at which scale is jumped? It seems that in its presentation of the continuity of space, Google Earth works, at least to some extent, to magnify how all space—and thus all scales—are interconnected. The ease at which we can move back and forth through scales seems to unhinge the foundation of any rigid hierarchical orderings of space (with the top levels of the hierarchy always exerting influence over those underneath it). Or perhaps another term, “scale bending,” might better encapsulate Google Earth’s manipulation of scale. To bend a scale is not to destroy it but to unfix it, to loosen its conceptual hold. In Google Earth, it is just as easy to zoom in as it is to zoom out. Zooming is one (almost) continuous movement (depending on the available data). As such, in order to experience scale, we have to re-map it ourselves over the terrain.

Granted Google Earth is at present limited by the fact that it cannot accurately represent ground level. When you near the ground, you have the option to switch to the 3-D modeling mode where, if users of Google Earth have created 3-D models of the buildings at ground level, you can navigate this space. Right now, the availability of 3-D models is sketchy so that the best viewing distance remains from above. This seems to be more of a technical limitation and one that could, if Google so desired, be easily adjusted. One can imagine the kinds of scales that Google Earth could potentially represent, one day zooming in on individual human beings in real-time, moving beneath the epidermal layer into the muscles, tissues, cells, nuclei, to end at what? The genetic layer? It, too, is being mapped. Complaints about our contemporary world often point to the condition of the individual, adrift in a sea of finance capitalism that denies spatial orientation. As Scott Bukatman notes in his analysis of cyberspace and representations thereof, “[t]he scale of human perception…no longer operates as an anchor for spatial exploration” (113). Does Google Earth provide a re-anchoring?

The characteristic first move of all Google Earth users is to zoom in on the homespace. From the coldness of outer space to the hub of phenomenological intimacy, Google Earth creates a new cosmology by allowing for a self-positioning within the global totality. We have introduced technologies that enhance perception beyond our natural capacities but nevertheless still seek to articulate these new scales of (outer/inner/cyber) space to our embodied selves. Google Earth has the potential to offer us this articulation. In complicating constructs of scale (for example the local/global divide) by illustrating visually how all sites are continuously interpolated by multiple scales, Google Earth allows for the kind of mapping that would seem to promote alternative cartographic projects. Our mapping of altDurham has been a test of this very possibility.

References:

Baudrillard, Jean. Simulations. NY: Semiotexte, 1983.

Bachelard, Gaston. The Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon Press, 1994.

Bukatman, Scott. Terminal Identity: The Postmodern Subject in Postmodern Science
Fiction
. Durham: Duke University Press, 1993.

De Certeau, Michel. “Walking in the City.” The Practice of Everyday Life. Trans. Steven
Rendall. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. 91-110.

Jameson, Fredric. Postmodernism, Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Durham:
Duke University Press, 1991.

Smith, Neil. “Contours of a spatialized politics: homeless vehicles and the production of
geographical space.” Social Text 33: 54-81.

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Our engagement with Google Earth has been an exercise in digital urbanism. We switched back and forth between physical spaces and virtual tags, aiming through our mapping to mark out an “Alternative Durham” spread across physical locations and digital homepages. Durham fits perfectly into the type of city prepped for the digital urbanism described by Jeff Rice. It is a post-industrial town; the legacy of the infamous tobacco days—a history inscribed into its architecture: warehouses, smokestacks, railroad tressels, etc. While Durham is experiencing a renovation of its spaces through selected renewal projects: converting the tobacco warehouses into lofts, restaurants, and office space, creating a new center for the arts, gobbling up remaining fields to make way for subdivisions, we wanted to highlight layers of life in Durham operating on a different socio-economic model. The way we understand these ‘layers,’ and how we hope we managed to visually represent them in Google Earth, is analogous to what Fredric Jameson refers to as ‘levels,’ or semi-autonomous mediations between the aesthetic and the economic: “a differentiated social function, a realm or zone within the social that has developed to the point at which it is governed internally by its own intrinsic laws and dynamics”. They are both within the space dominated by multinational capital and distinct from it, in that they are free of direct financial control and operate according to different, sometimes conflicting imperatives. What we have mapped can be thought of as a single socio-economic layer divided into ’sub-layers’ determined by use and/or cultural differences.In seeking to achieve a visualization of an ‘altDurham’ we selected approximately fifty sites (by no means exhaustive) to mark on Google Earth with place locators, site descriptors, web hyperlinks, and digital photographs. All together, you can “Play” “AltDurham” on Google Earth, a feature that virtually transports you to all of the marked sites, highlighting in relief the newly visualized cityscape.The first “layer” of AltDurham we refer to as “Community.” While there are many communities in Durham (and our list is by no means exhaustive), our focus was on what might be called ‘indie,’ DIY, and green/sustainable culture, all of which are largely decentered from any single community hub (such as a church, a particular business, or a downtown strip). The two places we mapped act co-operatively to provide resources for their members and ‘constituents.’ Bull City Headquarters, a drug and alcohol free space, runs a Queer youth drop-in night, hosts performances (artistic and visual), and houses the Durham Bike Co-Op, an on-site non-profit spot at which to build and repair bicycles. El Kilombo is an activist collective comprised of members of the African-American and Latino communities and students that offers a variety of services (ESL and computer classes, homework support, seminars, etc.) geared toward people of color and working class residents. Our second “layer,” “Food” is meant to illustrate the alternative methods (aside from frequenting the nationalized chains) of procuring food in the Durham area. The Durham Food Co-Op is a non-profit grocery space dedicated to cultivating sustainability through local and organic food. While anyone can shop at the Co-Op, becoming a member (and volunteering) will reduce the cost of your food. The Durham Farmer’s Market, open on Saturdays, provides a site for local farmers to sell their produce as well as the Mobile Market option of partnering up with a local farm and receiving, via automobile, a weekly portion of their crop.

For our “Education” layer, we selected sites offering educational programs alternative to those provided by the public school system. We included the eight charter schools presently operating in the city (and open to all residents) along with El Kilombo and the Durham Literacy Center. The Schoolhouse of Wonder, run in collaboration with Eno River State Park, promotes the study and conservation of natural ecologies through day and summer youth camps. The Music Explorium conducts roving drum circle classes, either in its space or in other community locales. “Art” comprises the highly active and diversified local artists utilizing various city spaces. The Transom is an art space that houses multiple studios; The Bull City Arts Collaborative is an “artist-run creative alliance” that provides workspace for local talent. Liberty Arts, a sculpture studio and casting facility, offers workshops to the public. SeeSaw Studio runs an apprenticeship program for teens in the field of textile printing and graphic design. And the Carolina Theatre, the independent theater in Durham, showcases two film festivals: the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and the North Carolina Gay and Lesbian Film Festival.The “Business” layer of the project, proving a bit more difficult to easily categorize, consists of businesses utilizing re-use, small-scale, and non-profit methods of production and exchange. Included in this layer are thrift stores (Grannie’s Panties, Trosa’s, Once and Again) including the non-profit Pennies for Change, which uses proceeds to fund the Durham Rescue Mission; independent and used bookstores (The Know, The Book Exchange, The Regulator, etc.); handicraft goods (the Durham Craft Market); and post-use recyclables (The Scrap Exchange, The Durham Bike Co-Op). The final layer, “green space,” is meant to mark out areas in Durham reserved for gardening, recreation, and contemplation, away from the hustle of city life. Seeds, Inc. is a non-profit community garden located in inner city Durham. Worked mostly by Durham teens, it provides education in sustainability, harvests locally grown produce, and acts as sanctuary for neighborhood residents. El Kilombo is also in the process of creating a community garden, the fruit of which will be available free of cost to the community. Lastly, we indicated various entrances to Eno River State Park, the predominant green space in Durham.References:Jameson, Fredric. Postmodernism, Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Durham:Duke University Press, 1991.

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