Article published In: Information Visualization
Edited by Isabel Meirelles, Marian Dörk and Yanni Loukissas
[Information Design Journal 27:1] 2022
► pp. 5–20
A dynamic topography for visualizing time and space in fictional literary texts
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Published online: 7 November 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/idj.22010.ric
https://doi.org/10.1075/idj.22010.ric
Abstract
This paper presents research on creating interactive prototypes for visualizing temporal spatial relationships in
fictional literary texts. Developed within the context of the Chronotopic Cartographies project, a practice-led inquiry yielded
dynamic visualizations from literary texts, the research explores the development and application of interactive three-dimensional
environments illustrating the ‘chronotopic’, time-space relationships across a series of fictional literary texts. Expert feedback
highlights the potential of the interaction model as a useful visual paradigm for supporting methods of reflective inquiry
hypothesis making. The work also represents a potential model for creating interactive temporal visualizations which support
hypothesis making across a broader sphere of the humanities.
Article outline
- Overview
- Background
- Aims
- Approach
- Data
- Literary time-space (chronotope)
- XML source
- Visualization
- Aesthetic approach
- Space: Horizontal ground
- Time: Vertical terrain
- Additional features
- Outcomes
- Horizontal network
- Vertical forms
- Movement
- Evaluation
- Visualization of movement and flow
- Immersive, explorable landscape
- Reflections and future work
- Conclusion
- Notes
References
References (27)
Aigner, W., Miksch, S., Schumann, H., Tominski, C. (2011). Visualization
of Time-Oriented Data, Human-Computer Interaction Series. Springer London.
Alex, B., Grover, C., Tobin, R., & Oberlander, J. (2019). Geoparsing
historical and contemporary literary text set in the City of Edinburgh. Language Resources and
Evaluation, 53(4), 651–675.
Bach, B., Dragicevic, P., Archambault, D., Hurter, C., Carpendale, S. (2014). A
Review of Temporal Data Visualizations Based on Space-Time Cube Operations. EuroVis 2014
Eurographics Conference on
Visualization (pp. 23–41).
Boyd Davis, S., & Kräutli, F. (2015). The
idea and image of historical time: Interactions between design and digital humanities. Visible
Language, 49(3), 100–119.
Bushell, S. (2020). Chronotopic
Cartographies. Lancaster University. [URL].
Bushell, S., Butler, J., Hay, D., Hutcheon, R., & Butterworth, A. (2021). Chronotopic
Cartography: Mapping Literary Time-Space. Journal of Victorian
Culture, 26(2), 310–325.
Bushell, S., Butler, J. O., Hay, D., & Hutcheon, R. (2022). Digital
Literary Mapping: II. Towards an Integrated Visual–Verbal Method for the
Humanities. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and
Geovisualization, 57(1), 37–64.
Champion, E. M. (2017). Digital
humanities is text heavy, visualization light, and simulation poor. Digital Scholarship in the
Humanities, 32 (1), 25–32.
Donaldson, C., Gregory, I. N., & Murrieta-Flores, P. (2015). Mapping
‘Wordsworthshire’: a GIS study of literary tourism in Victorian Lakeland. Journal of Victorian
Culture, 20(3), 287–307.
Drucker, J. (2011). Humanities
approaches to graphical display. Digital Humanities
Quarterly, 5(1), 1–21.
Goldfarb, D., Arends, M., Froschauer, J., & Merkl, D. (2011). Revisiting
3D information landscapes for the display of art historical web content. Proceedings of the 8th
International Conference on Advances in Computer Entertainment Technology (1–8).
Gregory, I., Baron, A., Cooper, D., Hardie, A., Murrieta-Flores, P. & Rayson, P. (2014). Crossing
boundaries: Using GIS in literary studies, history and
beyond. In Juliette Hueber & Antonio Mendes da Silva (eds.) Keys
for architectural history research in the digital era. l’Institut national d’histoire de l’art.
Hinrichs, U., Forlini, S., Moynihan, B. (2019). In
defense of sandcastles: Research thinking through visualization in digital humanities. Digital
Scholarship in the
Humanities 341, 80–99.
Jessop, M. (2008). The
inhibition of geographical information in digital humanities scholarship. Literary and
Linguistic
Computing, 23(1), 39–50.
McCurdy, N., Lein, J., Coles, K., & Meyer, M. (2015). Poemage:
Visualizing the sonic topology of a poem. IEEE transactions on visualization and computer
graphics, 22(1), 439–448.
Nöllenburg, M. (2007). Geographic
Visualization, in: Kerren, A., Ebert, A., Meyer, J. (Eds.), Human-Centered
Visualization Environments. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, 257–294.
Piatti, B., Bär, H. R., Reuschel, A. K., Hurni, L., & Cartwright, W. (2009). Mapping
literature: Towards a geography of fiction. In Cartography and
art (1–16). Springer.
Posavec, S. (2006). Writing
Without Words. [URL]
Reuschel, A. K., & Hurni, L. (2011). Mapping
literature: Visualization of spatial uncertainty in fiction. The Cartographic
Journal, 48(4), 293–308.
Rydberg-Cox, J. (2011). Social
networks and the language of Greek tragedy. Journal of the Chicago Colloquium on Digital
Humanities and Computer Science, 1(3).
Schöttler, S., Yang, Y., Pfister, H., & Bach, B. (2021). Visualizing
and interacting with geospatial networks: A survey and design space. Computer Graphics
Forum, 40 (6), 5–33.
Stange, J. E., & Dörk, M. (2016). Visualizing
the spatiality in fictional narratives. Workshop on Visualization for the Digital Humanities.
VIS4DH’16. IEEE VIS
Three.js (2022). Three.Js
-JavaScript 3D Library [URL]
