Digital Humanities - Or more on Stories and Data
I'm thinking again about stories and data. Among other places, I've written on these themes here, here, here and here.
When I read Steven Berlin Johnson's incredible book, The Invention of Air, I was struck by his depiction of the 18th century coffeehouses as the social network grease of science, philososphy, and the Enlightenment. Here's what I wrote when I read it in March 2009:
The Invention of AirThe Lunar Societylunaticksinnovation
Here are some technology-enhanced revisits to that time and those tools, courtesy of Brain Pickings, a wonderfully curated treasure trove of information.
Mapping the Republic of Letters -- social network analysis of Englightenment era letters.
The E-englightenment - an internet of letters, notes, and writing from European enlightenment thinkers, connecting physical collections from libraries through electronic networks. For fun and scholarship.
London Lives - another database of archival documents, allowing historians to view old crime patterns, poverty records, and other historical documents in new ways.
All of these tools change how we can see and think about the past. They make data out of singlular objects by allowing us to see them in broader contexts, query complete sets of similar items, and wonder anew at the relationships and dynamics of the past.
Tags: philanthropy, digitalhumanities, Stories, data