How to Tell Stories with Networks: Exploring the Narrative Afffordances of Graphs with the Iliad

Tommaso Venturini, Liliana Bounegru, Mathieu Jacomy, Jonathan Gray

Research output: Chapter or section in a book/report/conference proceedingBook chapter

9 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

No doubt, networks have become indispensable mathematical tools in many aspects of life in the twenty-first century. They allow us to calculate all kinds of relational metrics and to quantify the properties of their nodes, clusters and global structures. These modes of calculation are increasingly prevalent in an age of digital data. But networks are more than formal analytical tools. They are also powerful metaphors of our collective life, with all of its complexity and its many dependencies. This is why, among the various strategies of data visualization, networks seem to have assumed a paradigmatic position, spreading to the most different disciplines and colonizing a growing number of digital and non-digital objects, sometimes as mere decoration. Contemplating the visual representation of a network, we don’t (always) need to compute its mathematical properties to appreciate its heuristic value – as anyone who has ever used a transit plan knows well. Networks are extraordinary calculating devices, but they are also maps, instruments of navigation and representation. Not only do they guide our steps through the territories that they represent, they invite our imagination to see and explore the world in different ways.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Datafied Society
Subtitle of host publicationStudying Culture through Data
EditorsMirko Tobias Schafer, Karin van Es
Place of PublicationAbingdon, U. K.
PublisherRoutledge
Chapter11
Pages155-169
Number of pages15
ISBN (Electronic)9781040778463
ISBN (Print)9789462981362
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Feb 2017

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Social Sciences
  • General Arts and Humanities

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