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Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
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Searching... | 30000010336311 | Q355 R39 2013 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
Episodes in the history of data, from early modern math problems to today's inescapable "dataveillance," that demonstrate the dependence of data on culture.
We live in the era of Big Data, with storage and transmission capacity measured not just in terabytes but in petabytes (where peta - denotes a quadrillion, or a thousand trillion). Data collection is constant and even insidious, with every click and every "like" stored somewhere for something. This book reminds us that data is anything but "raw," that we shouldn't think of data as a natural resource but as a cultural one that needs to be generated, protected, and interpreted. The book's essays describe eight episodes in the history of data from the predigital to the digital. Together they address such issues as the ways that different kinds of data and different domains of inquiry are mutually defining; how data are variously "cooked" in the processes of their collection and use; and conflicts over what can--or can't--be "reduced" to data. Contributors discuss the intellectual history of data as a concept; describe early financial modeling and some unusual sources for astronomical data; discover the prehistory of the database in newspaper clippings and index cards; and consider contemporary "dataveillance" of our online habits as well as the complexity of scientific data curation.
Essay Authors
Geoffrey C. Bowker, Kevin R. Brine, Ellen Gruber Garvey, Lisa Gitelman, Steven J. Jackson, Virginia Jackson, Markus Krajewski, Mary Poovey, Rita Raley, David Ribes, Daniel Rosenberg, Matthew Stanley, Travis D. Williams
Author Notes
Lisa Gitelman is Professor of English and Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University. She is the coeditor of New Media, 7710-1915 (2003) and author of Always Already New: Media, History, and, the Data of Culture (2006), both published by the MIT Press.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. vii |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Color PlatesDaniel Rosenberg and Thomas Augst and Ann Fabian and Jimena Canales and Lisa Lynch and Lisa Gitelman and Paul E. Ceruzzi and Lev Manovich and Jeremy Douglass and William Huber and Vikas Mouli | |
1 Data before the Fact | p. 15 |
2 Procrustean Marxism and Subjective Rigor: Early Modern Arithmetic and Its Readers | p. 41 |
3 From Measuring Desire to Quantifying Expectations: A Late Nineteenth-Century Effort to Marry Economic Theory and Data | p. 61 |
4 Where Is That Moon, Anyway? The Problem of Interpreting Historical Solar Eclipse Observations | p. 77 |
5 "facts and FACTS": Abolitionists' Database Innovations | p. 89 |
6 Paper as Passion: Niklas Luhmann and His Card Index | p. 103 |
7 Dataveillance and Countervailance | p. 121 |
8 Data Bite Man: The Work of Sustaining a Long-Term Study | p. 147 |
Data Flakes: An Afterword to "Raw Data" Is an Oxymoron | p. 167 |
List of Contributors | p. 173 |
Index | p. 179 |