"Smail began his work on the notaries of Marseille, who played a critical role in the late medieval period, as today, in transfers of property and in contracts more generally. The collections of notarial records in Marseille, as throughout Provence and Languedoc, are rich enough to support many different thematic studes, including studies of the notaries themselves as a professional group and of the individuals whose names appear in their records (some 14,000 in this case). Smail's study began as such, but evolved into something else, more imaginative, provocative and also tentative. A better first book is hard to find."
"In this interesting and thought-provoking work, Daniel Smail concludes that the emergence of the street as the normal cartographic marker led first to the development of urban maps, and finally to the process of attaching street addresses to citizens. . . .Smail's work is scholarly and is highly recommended."A.G. Traver. History: Reviews of New Books. Winter 2000.
"Imaginary Cartographies is a masterful case study of the relationship between spatial representation and the emergence of identity in late medieval and early modern Marseille. Through exhaustive archival and theoretical research, Smail explores the ways in which notorial records refer to an individual's relationship to the territory, thereby revealing the emergence of the notion of personal and national identity . . . The author's convincing argument allows his readers to rethink not only how identity was articulated in the late medieval and early modern period, but also how both visual and linguistic spatial representations intersect in an emergent national imagination. The scope of Smail's work will appeal across lines of discipline as this book . . . lays out a solid methodological approach, navigating smoothly between the theoretical and the archival."Elisabeth Hodges, Mapline. Spring 2000.
"This book makes a lively and original contribution to current debates on state development."Karl Appuhn, Columbia University. Sixteenth Century Journal XXXII/1 (2001)
"This is an important work, establishing a methodology and analytical framework that I hope will inspire studies of these questions of language, perception, and statecraft elsewhere, including the other towns of Provence and cities in the north that were little affectd by the culture of the public notaries."David Nicholas, Clemson University. American Historical Review, December 2001
"This book is elegantly written, and it is a pleasure to follow its argument through learned forays into topics ranging from cognitive psychology to cartography. . . This is an ambitious book, filled with ideas that will stimulate researchers to look much more closely at records that they may have taken for granted."John Drendel, Universite du Quebec. Speculum, October 2001
"Smail began his work on the notaries of Marseille, who played a critical role in the late medieval period, as today, in transfers of property and in contracts more generally. The collections of notarial records in Marseille, as throughout Provence and Languedoc, are rich enough to support many different thematic studes, including studies of the notaries themselves as a professional group and of the individuals whose names appear in their records (some 14,000 in this case). Smail's study began as such, but evolved into something else, more imaginative, provocative and also tentative. A better first book is hard to find."Josef W. Konvitz, Imago Mundi 54, 2002.
"In this original and gracefully written book, Daniel Smail transforms the mundane name and place entries of notarial records into rich and exciting conceptual categories that challenge our illusions about the origins of modernity. This is a book as compelling for its methodology as for its historical insights."Barbara H. Rosenwein, Loyola University Chicago
"In his superb and original Imaginary Cartographies, Daniel Smail shows how physical space and identity were constructedthrough verbal mappings of the worldin the late medieval and early-modern city. A great achievement!"Teofilo F. Ruiz, UCLA