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This paper set out to investigate physical geography as represented in online cartographies and asked whether they relay all that we need to know about the humanity of space as described in literary narrations. Using critical reading approaches to digital geospatiality, it argues that digital treatments of space are narrowed down only to their virtual essentials but say little about space as a spiritual value in terms of intuitive knowledge, and in the light of space as human time, as well as space as passage of volume, as a literary „affect." This gives the reader to appreciate the concept of literature as not only „scripted" but also oral and experienced. Space is not just a physical representation on a physical screen or on the printed page of a map; it is also a literary narrative and a colonial and postcolonial habitus of (hi)story. Just like literature, it is not created in a vacuum but is anchored in culturally lived experiences. Therefore, there is a need for an interdisciplinary and therefore expanded approach as epitomized in postcolonial digital humanities that supports online cartographic representations of space with new narratives of space as spirituality, time, volume, history and culture, in order to render the digital idea of the environment into a complete aesthetic experience.
Digital geo-spatiality, virtual cartography, the humanity of geography, spiritual knowledge, space as time, volume and culture, lived experience, creative art as tacit signifies of space 1. Introduction
Digital geo-spatiality, virtual cartography, the humanity of geography, spiritual knowledge, space as time, volume and culture, lived experience, creative art as tacit signifies of space 1. Introduction
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