Colloquium: Lauren Klein

Date/Time
Date(s) - 01/31/2020
11:00 am - 12:30 pm

Location
3108 JKB

Category(ies)


The Humanities Center, in  collaboration with the Office of Digital Humanities and the American Studies program, welcomes Lauren Klein, Associate Professor in the Departments of English and Quantitative Theory and Methods, and Director of the Digital Humanities Lab at Emory University, as our Colloquium speaker on Friday, January 31st at 11:00 AM in 4010 JFSB.

Title: “The Shape of History: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody’s Feminist Visualization Work”

Data visualization is not a recent innovation. Even in the nineteenth century, economists and educators, as well as artists and illustrators, were fully aware of the inherent subjectivity of visual perception, the culturally-situated position of the viewer, and the power of images in general—and of visualization in particular—to convey arguments and ideas. In this talk, I examine the history of data visualization in relation to feminist theory, which has also long attended to the subjective nature of knowledge and its transmission. Exploring the visualization work of Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1804-1894), I show how we might recover her contributions to the development of modern data visualization techniques. I contend, moreover, that by conceiving of data visualization as a feminist method, we might better understand its function—in the nineteenth century as today—as a way to present concepts, advance arguments and perform critique. My evidence for this second claim is both theoretical and applied; by reimagining Peabody’s charts for the web, and by explaining how the affordances of HTML, JavaScript, and other web technologies enhance certain features while limiting others, I accentuate the original arguments of the charts’ designs. This talk thus describes a digital humanities project and a nineteenth-century one, and among its conclusions is that, when engaging in information work—and especially work involving visualization—the nineteenth century is never far from view.

For a write-up of this lecture click here.

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