"With rapidly shifting digital technologies, geo-surveillance, everyday cartography, privatized georeferenced data, and neoliberalization, New Lines offers a reflexive reassessment of the scholarly praxis of critical GIS, an increasingly anachronistic term. Attentive also to contemporary philosophical debates, Matthew W. Wilsons lively and ambitious manifesto pushes the reader to re-examine everything they thought they knew about the topic."-Eric Sheppard, author of Limits to Globalization: The Disruptive Geographies of Capitalist Development
"This elegantly argued book offers a brilliantly original perspective on the many troubles-technical, epistemological, cultural, and political-associated with the contemporary proliferation of digital mapping systems. For anyone interested in understanding the rapidly changing sociohistorical, technological and institutional contexts in which cartographic practice occurs, Matthew W. Wilsons New Lines will provide a foundational source of insight, wisdom, inspiration, and provocation."-Neil Brenner, Harvard University
"The book is an important provocation for any mapmaker, cartographer, and spatial thinker. Ultimately, the book is a required read even if only for the history alone for any map user."-Rhizomes
"New Lines reinvigorates some of the discussions that GIScience scholars have debated for decades by presenting material that is substantial without being impenetrable." -Cartographic Perspectives