Aesthetics, Methods, and Critiques of Information Visualization in the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
May 20 – May 22, 2010
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Organized by HyperStudio – Digital Humanities at MIT
Keynote speakers:
- Johanna Drucker (UCLA)
- Lev Manovich (UC San Diego)
- Ben Shneiderman (University of Maryland)
- Fernanda Viégas/Martin Wattenberg (flowing media)
For the conference registration, please click here.
How do visual representations of complex data help humanities scholars ask new questions? How does visual rhetoric shape the way we relate to documents and artifacts? And, can we recompose the field of digital humanities to integrate more dynamic analytical methods into humanities research? HyperStudio’s Visual Interpretations conference will bring digital practitioners and humanities scholars together with experts in art and design to consider the past, present, and future of visual epistemology in digital humanities. The goal is to get beyond the notion that information exists independently of visual presentation, and to rethink visualization as an integrated analytical method in humanities scholarship. By fostering dialogue and critical engagement, this conference aims to explore new ways to design data and metadata structures so that their visual embodiments function as “humanities tools in digital environments.” (Johanna Drucker)
Organizers:
MIT HyperStudio for Digital Humanities
with the MIT Communications Forum (Opening keynote) and the Comparative Media Studies Program