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Tag: metadata

Missing: Cultural Criticism

January 9, 2011 / Derek Mueller

Alan Liu’s MLA 2011 paper, “Where is Cultural Criticism in the Digital Humanities?” arrived this morning in Google Reader. Basically, Liu introduces the 4Humanities advocacy initiative and then argues that a lack of cultural criticism in digital humanities may thwart the growth of this emerging field. Making data and making things out of data may not matter if, when deploying these things, digital humanists have not been able to demonstrate their value.

This inquiring into the status and location of specific, identifiable ingredients, e.g., “cultural criticism,” does seem like a common enough quest when we are confronted with something new and in-becoming as is the case for digital humanities. Up for discussion, though, is whether “cultural criticism” ought to be one of the building blocks in this new domain and what, exactly, is at stake should digital humanists neglect critique. Liu positions as rivals “close reading” and “distant reading,” and while I have questions about this matchup (i.e., equivalency) in the context of Moretti’s work, Liu ends up suggesting an improved, harmonious, cultural-critical blend. Distant readings (e.g., abstractions, models, visualizations) need to be cycled back through a critical apparatus, or people will not find relevance in them. Liu puts it this way: “To be an equal partner–rather than, again, just a servant–at the table, digital humanists will need to find ways to show that thinking critically about metadata, for instance, scales into thinking critically about the power, finance, and other governance protocols of the world.” A cynical reading of this argument finds the presumed nuturalness of critical thinking and hermeneutics in the humanities overstated, and, likewise, it appears to minimize (or altogether overlook) the heuretic-inventive edge of distant reading.

Still, for traditional-minded humanities scholars given to digital treatments of rare and special texts, this makes a certain sense. These methods and insights related to them should scale into other domains. But will their value go missing if that scaling–a scaling of “cultural criticism,” at that–is not fully realized (a rhetorical challenge, indeed)? Keeping in reach the advocacy motives of 4Humanities, the talk also hearkens to broader concerns about the dwindling cultural status of the humanities in general. If humanists’ digital expertise is not valued in other domains because those folks are capable of data-mining, coding, etc., then, in one scenario, what awaits is the continuation of a value-it-how-you-will interpretive enterprise. Much is at stake in how the digital humanities goes, in other words. We can expect its failures and successes to have residual bearing on the humanities more traditionally understood. This thinking is a degree removed from Liu’s central assertion. I think it’s as likely the case that digital humanities, for its investment in computation, is not as much at risk as the non-digital humanities. If the digital humanities are going to be preservation-minded, in other words, perhaps they should be as much concerned with the heuretic and inventive aspects of their work as they are with the critical and hermeneutic aspects.

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Miscellaneous Notes

May 23, 2007 / Derek Mueller / 2 Comments

David Weinberger’s Everything Is Miscellaneous (Amazon
| blog)
accounts for
the overhaul of classificatory efforts brought about through various
digital platforms–del.icio.us, Wikipedia, Flickr, and so on–as each affords
nearly limitless reorganization. This third order, the digital, amplifies miscellany,
and with it characteristics of mayhem, disorderliness, and pandemonium
that distinguishes the digital from contending orders. Weinberger tabs this
condition the "new order of order," and he ends the book’s prologue with a
gesture that brings information to life, infuses it with desire: "[information]
wants to be miscellaneous" (7).

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Tags and Metadata

January 12, 2007 / Derek Mueller / 4 Comments

On Monday Dave Sifry of Technorati posted
Happy Taggiversary,
an entry marking the second anniversary of Technorati tags. In it he
announced the launch of tag pages, a
kind of 10×10 of semantic tags
assigned to various blog entries around the web for this hour. Instead of
10×10’s keyword/picture relay, we get a cloud of the tags themselves.

I’m interested in the response to Sifry offered by Matthew Hurst at

Data Mining
. Hurst contends that tags, whether assigned by authors or by
third-parties, constitute object data rather than metadata. Because search
engines easily conflate the semantic content of tags for the semantic content of
a blog entry itself, tags are more appropriately identified as object data.
Hurst differentiates textual objects from non-textual objects; for the latter,
semantic tags are less likely to be confused with the object itself, as with an
image, for example.

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Locative Metadata II

December 28, 2006 / Derek Mueller

I mentioned the other day that I had more maps to share.
I put together another batch built from program-level locative metadata rather
than the field-wide or disciplinary locations shown in the maps of CCCC chairs’
addresses/conventions since 1977
and the institutional membership of the rhet-comp
doctoral consortium
. Below I’ve worked from the CCR web site to come up
with simple geographic representations of various features of the program where
I’m doing graduate work: I. Where our faculty come from; II. Where our graduate
students come from (MA institutions); and III. Where our alumni have gone.
The fourth and final map in this batch rolls these three data-sets together,
mashing them into a single map that shows multiple location-associations for the
program. For now I’ll hold off on making the argument that such slices of
locative metadata are significant beyond the usual ways we have both for
understanding a graduate program from the inside (who do we understand ourselves
to be?) and from the outside (what image do we project?). Of course, these
aren’t the only questions for which the maps have relevance, and though they’re
a starting place, perhaps they seem too simple (or unanswerable given
complex variables) to bother asking.

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Locative Metadata

December 26, 2006 / Derek Mueller

Over the past few days I’ve been tinkering with alternatives for representing locative metadata. I stumbled across John Emerson’s DIY Map, which layers together a Flash movie with XML, and I’ve been encouraged with the results. Emerson’s project has been around for over two years; the release history tells that it came about just before the release of the Google maps API in Feb. of 2005.

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Keep ‘Em All Coming Back

June 1, 2006 / Derek Mueller

What exactly constitutes loyalty among readers of weblogs? What is loyalty,
anyway? Habituated interest? Supersocial attachment? Attentional
symbiosis? Casual subscription? And are future returns, tracked through IP
addresses, adequate or reliable indications of loyalty, of interest, or of a
sort of persistence, of ongoing reawdrite entanglement? Could be.

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Phenetic Urge

January 22, 2006 / Derek Mueller

I was reading along in an article called "Neighbourhoods on the Net" when I
ran across an unfamiliar phrase: phenetic urge. The article evaluates the
impact of datasets circulating online about real neighborhoods.  The three
authors collected links to 33 sites that make use of "geodemographic"
data–income, pollution, average selling price homes, etc.  They reduced
the list to seventeen profiled examples, and from there, zeroed in on four sites
for extended "case studies." To conclude, the article offers a set of
implications for policy, which includes conclusions about screwy data leading to
flawed representations of certain places and accessibility concerns,
notably–and repeatedly–cast in terms of age and economic status ("Those
sections of the population that are financially unable and/or unwilling (as is
the case with many older people) to access online sources will be increasingly
disadvantaged as information availability and society’s dependence on it
expands" (37)).

Phenetic urge nods to the taxonomy impulse, the classificatory move. 
Here’s the immediate context:

Allowing for the enormous difficulties involved in ‘un-inventing’ IBNIS
[‘Internet-based Neightbourhood Information Systems’] (let alone the ‘phenetic
urge’ of which they are so potent a symbol), the core policy issue to come out
of this report is how best to ensure that the advantages of IBNIS are not
outweighed by the disadvantages listed above. (36)

Specifically, the disadvantages are much like those I already mentioned: "mis-characterising
localities," "inacurate depiction[s]," "unwarranted ‘redlining,’" and "online
marginalisation."   Ultimately, the concern-as-delivered is over the
datasets (geodemographic and, perhaps, beyond) representing neighbourhoods on
the net.  A Beckettian critique: "The danger is in the neatness of
identifications."  IBNIS, their place-identifying data, are a potent symbol
of "phenetic urges."

Continue reading →

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1, 2, 3, 4,

April 11, 2005 / Derek Mueller

Most importantly, this is entry No. 301 at Earth Wide Moth.  Fifteen
months, six days.  Three or four memorable entries and three or four
forgettable ones.  The rest, writing.

On the subject of writing, I’m 3700 words committed to the 611 project, a
draft of which is due to be shared on Thursday–opened to full-on blazing scrutiny.  Words: not to be confused
with images.  But I have about five pages worth of visualizations to
sprinkle in here and there. Should I be worried that I haven’t yet said much
about the specific method? Nah.  I’m going for the recipe-card
paragraph close to the end; a list of steps, each of which must not exceed
five words.  Plus, who wants to read a bunch of formulae: "To arrive at the
standard deviation, take the square root of the number of…."  Yuck-oh. 
I’d rather capture a .mov of me futzing around with a calculator and a
spreadsheet and Flash until it was just right.

Too-much too-fast writing puts me in the spirit of photo-taking.  This afternoon,
when it occurred to me that I might blog something or other today, I went and
got the camera, looked out the window for a long time.  Nothing stirring
(except the neighbor kid who spent two minutes waving a plastic saber at gnat-swarms, but his folks wouldn’t
appreciate me digitalizing him into blog-famy).  So I put the whole thing off. 
Later (by which I mean ‘just now’) I zoned through an online content management meeting (the unveiling of a centralized content repository) for little more than an hour, because I’m picking up some online work with my old u. for the summer months. 
From the meeting (which included a conference call): "Metadata? It’s like a
wrapper
that surrounds content items."  Or rapper.  Or rapport. 

#301#

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