Digital Humanities Abstracts

“Timelines Online: Hypermedia and Information Architecture in the Representation of Intellectual History”
John Zuern Department of English, University of Hawai'I zuern@hawaii.edu

My presentation will address the potential--and some of the problems--of applying the principles of information architecture and graphic design elaborated in the work of Nielsen [13], Rosenfeld and Morville [15], Tufte [17], and Wurman [19] to the creation of web-based educational resources that represent the history of ideas. While my own work is focused on developing instructional materials in the history of literary theory and criticism, my presentation discusses general problems in the graphic design of timelines that are relevant to a number of humanities disciplines. Although careful attention to historical issues is commonplace in courses on literature, educators who confront the daunting task of teaching literary theory often find that time constraints and the perceived difficulty of individual texts preclude sufficient consideration of the historical and institutional contexts which have shaped the formation of concepts, approaches, and assumptions. Such consideration is, however, crucial for an understanding of any theory's contribution. Carefully designed hypermedia systems have the potential to represent intellectual history as a dynamic, networked process driven by dialogue and contest, providing students a means of exploring the complexity of that history and of entering into the conversation that sustains it. In an effort to move beyond an instrumental application of electronic media as a storage-and-delivery system for learning materials, my project seeks to develop design strategies that take into account developments in the theory of historiography (e.g. Foucault [7], White [18], and Ginzburg [8]) that have important implications for the representation of history in any format. With reference to recent work in knowledge representation [12] and a series of concrete examples, my paper will demonstrate some of the theoretical and methodological challenges that arise when we turn to relatively static spatial relationships as a means of conveying the dynamic temporal and conceptual interconnections that characterize intellectual history. Developing solutions for problems of design is a hermeneutic procedure that engages the designer in a "dialogue with the design situation" [4] and demands a critical examination of received frameworks for organizing historical knowledge. In the case of graphical timelines, the dominant metaphor of the "line" itself tends to privilege chronology, which presents history as a sequence of events, over models that emphasize, for example, networks of discourses [7]. The scope of my own project in its present form is restricted to the years 1965-1975, a decade in which a number of influential positions articulated within philosophy, linguistics, and the social sciences began to inform literary-critical study. In pursuing this project, I have attempted to meet the following desiderata for resources of this kind:
  • to make available clear, accurate historical data, such as biographical dates of important figures, publication dates, and the dates and rosters of significant seminars and conferences, as well as references to major historical, social, and cultural events that have an impact on the development of ideas;
  • to augment the above data with the kinds of anecdotal material valorized by the New Historicism in literary criticism as well as relations of quotidian events, personal habits, and chance occurrences of which records exists and out of which "microhistories" might be assembled [8];
  • to ensure that the system encourages both browsing and known-item searching;
  • to allow users to specify the types of information they wish to access (for example, a chronological bibliography of an individual theorist's publications or the genealogy of a particular critical term);
  • to allow users to control the level of granularity (for example, choosing to access a chronological bibliography of an single theorist's or of representative texts of an entire school of thought);
  • to permit multiple forms of access and interpretation (enlisting the