Around the world in several questions

My reading this week included Simon Ryan's article "Inscribing the Emptiness" and Megan A. Norcia's "Puzzling Empire." I've also been editing an article about the spatiality of board games, so that Norcia's article (which I cite there!) felt particularly relevant. Because I work on children's culture, I'm especially interested in the link between education and play; how the carrying out of actions to (in the case of a jigsaw/dissected map) or on (in the case of many board games) a map for pleasure works to produce knowledge about the spaces depicted on that map. I was not a Victorian child, but I did have a very large "world map" jigsaw puzzle when I was younger. In addition to teaching me some geography (it was the first place I encountered the international date line!) it also had large pictures of animals on the areas which they came from. (Ryan's article quotes a Jonathan Swift poem in which Swift makes fun of "Geograp...