Lingua Technica: Journal of Digital Literary Studies
Vol. 2 No. 1 (2026): Literature and computation: mapping, modeling, and mediation

Digital literary cartography and colonial space: re-mapping spatial imaginations in Robinson Crusoe and Max Havelaar

Fitriya Dessi Wulandari (Unknown)
René Faruk Garzozi Pincay (Unknown)
Dian Muhammad Rifai (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Jan 2026

Abstract

Background: The spatial turn in literary studies and digital humanities highlights the need to reassess how colonial space is constructed through the interaction between narrative and cartographic knowledge. Objective: This study examines how colonial spatial imagination is produced, contested, and differentiated in Robinson Crusoe (1719) and Max Havelaar (1860) through digital literary cartography. Method: Using a qualitative digital humanities design, the research integrates close textual analysis with historical cartographic materials and spatial metadata, focusing on Atlantic navigation maps, West Indies and New England coastal maps, and administrative maps of Java and Bantam. Results: The findings show that Robinson Crusoe aligns with a cartographic logic of enclosure and maritime circulation, reinforced by island, Atlantic, and West Indies maps that normalize spatial mastery. In contrast, Max Havelaar articulates a fragmented administrative geography, revealed through maps of Java and the Dutch East Indies that expose bureaucratic segmentation and ethical tension. Comparative re-mapping demonstrates divergent cartographic epistemologies shaped by exploration versus governance. Implication: Digital literary cartography reveals colonial space as an ideological construct rather than a neutral backdrop. Novelty: The study offers a comparative Global South–oriented cartographic reading that repositions maps as critical epistemic texts in colonial literature.  

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

lingtech

Publisher

Subject

Education Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Other

Description

Lingua Technica: Journal of Digital Literary Studies is a peer-reviewed international journal published by Asosiasi Relawan dan Pengelola Jurnal LPTNU (ARJUNU). This journal is dedicated to exploring the intersection of language, literature, and technology within the realm of digital ...