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E-raamat: Visible Numbers: Essays on the History of Statistical Graphics

Edited by (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA)
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Bringing together scholars from around the world, this collection examines many of the historical developments in making data visible through charts, graphs, thematic maps, and now interactive displays. Today, we are used to seeing data portrayed in a dizzying array of graphic forms. Virtually any quantified knowledge, from social and physical science to engineering and medicine, as well as business, government, or personal activity, has been visualized. Yet the methods of making data visible are relatively new innovations, most stemming from eighteenth- and nineteenth-century innovations that arose as a logical response to a growing desire to quantify everything-from science, economics, and industry to population, health, and crime. Innovators such as Playfair, Alexander von Humboldt, Heinrich Berghaus, John Snow, Florence Nightingale, Francis Galton, and Charles Minard began to develop graphical methods to make data and their relations more visible. In the twentieth century, data design became both increasingly specialized within new and existing disciplines-science, engineering, social science, and medicine-and at the same time became further democratized, with new forms that make statistical, business, and government data more accessible to the public. At the close of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first, an explosion in interactive digital data design has exponentially increased our access to data. The contributors analyze this fascinating history through a variety of critical approaches, including visual rhetoric, visual culture, genre theory, and fully contextualized historical scholarship.

Arvustused

"The present volume is a collection of ten essays on the subject, mainly written by humanities (especially English) professors. Given this fact, the focus is, as one might expect, on rhetoric and epistemology. (...) those individuals finding the perspective on the subject more in line with their own will be pleased by the 25-page annotated bibliography that is supplied, in addition to the 24 pages of cited works. Summing Up: Recommended."

- C. Bauer, York College of Pennsylvania in CHOICE

List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
xv
Acknowledgments xvii
Notes on Contributors xix
Introduction 1(18)
Charles Kostelnick
Miles Kimball
PART I VISUALIZING BODIES: HEALTH, DISEASE, EVOLUTION
1 Visualizing Evolution and Development: The Rise of Geometric Morphometries
19(24)
Alan G. Gross
2 Florence Nightingale's Statistical Table for Hospitals: A Work of Utility and Art
43(18)
Lee E. Brasseur
3 Visualizing Public Health Risks: Graphical Representations of Smallpox in the Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth Centuries
61(22)
Candice A. Welhausen
Rebecca E. Burnett
PART II VISUALIZING NATIONS: MORALITY, WAR, NATIONALISM
4 Joseph Fletcher, Thematic Maps, Slavery, and the Worst Places to Live in the U.K. and the U.S.
83(24)
Robert Cook
Howard Wainer
5 Innovation and Inertia in Atmospheric and Census Cartography in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century America
107(20)
Mark Monmonier
6 Mountains of Wealth, Rivers of Commerce: Michael G. Mulhall's Graphics and the Imperial Gaze
127(26)
Miles A. Kimball
7 "A scheme of cross-roads, orderly and mad": British Trench Maps of the First World War
153(24)
Marguerite Helmers
PART III EXAMINING VISIBLE NUMBERS: FORMS, METHODS, HISTORIOGRAPHIES
8 Mosaics, Culture, and Rhetorical Resiliency: The Convoluted Genealogy of a Data Display Genre
177(30)
Charles Kostelnick
9 The Twentieth-Century Computer Graphics Revolution in Statistics
207(12)
Dianne Cook
10 The Milestones Project: A Database for the History of Data Visualization
219(16)
Michael Friendly
Matthew Sigal
Derek Harnanansingh
11 Annotated Bibliography of Scholarship on the History of Data Graphics
235(26)
Kevin Van Winkle
Works Cited 261(24)
Index 285
Miles A. Kimball is Professor and Department Head of Communication and Rhetoric at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA

Charles Kostelnick is Professor of English at Iowa State University, USA.