“Data Material”: Data Visualisation and the Subjectivity of Knowledge in Late 19th Century France

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_EBDC9EC56BC8
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
“Data Material”: Data Visualisation and the Subjectivity of Knowledge in Late 19th Century France
Journal
History of Science
Author(s)
Debluë Claire-Lise
Publication state
Submitted to the publisher
Language
english
Abstract
Over the last 150 years, visualizing data has been a core issue of making and communicating science. Visual representations of data have not only shaped our understanding of the social world, but they also have contributed to the “scientification” of social science itself. By actively promoting the application of the “graphical method” to statistics, early statisticians opened a new path for making social facts visible. Interestingly, these strong advocates of “statistical images” fostered the increasing legitimacy of imaging quantitative information, while also striving mightily to give a concrete and tangible shape to allegedly abstract knowledge, fostering therefore a sensory approach to statistics. This article examines the primary importance of thinking the materiality of visual statistics. Overriding the long-standing distinction between objectivity and subjectivity, and between visuality and materiality, it argues that a greater attention should be paid to the appropriation process of statistical knowledge at a critical moment of its institutionalization and acknowledgement as a science.
Create date
27/01/2022 13:48
Last modification date
28/01/2022 6:34
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