Archives Distant Reading: Mapping the Activity of the League of Nations' Intellectual Cooperation

Details

Ressource 1Download: BIB_A6834963D84F.P001.pdf (6661.70 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_A6834963D84F
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Archives Distant Reading: Mapping the Activity of the League of Nations' Intellectual Cooperation
Title of the conference
Digital Humanities 2016
Author(s)
Grandjean Martin
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2016
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
531-534
Language
english
Abstract
Founded in 1922 by the League of Nations upon observation that the pacification of Europe may benefit from a better collaboration between scientific elites, the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation (ICIC) is responsible for coordinating the restructuration of knowledge circulation. Bringing together leading researchers at the height of their career, such as Albert Einstein, Marie Curie and George Hale, chaired by Henri Bergson, the Committee weaves a complex network between transnational scientific institutions and societies, congresses and individuals (Pernet, 2014).
This paper proposes an analysis of the work and functioning of the organization between 1919 and 1927 by setting up a database containing metadata of thousands of documents contained by the ICIC funds (United Nations Archives, Geneva). Visualized as a network of 3.200 people (tens of thousands of relationships), this work provides a new understanding of the internal organization of the Intellectual Cooperation, as well as completely new insights about its relations with the rest of the scientific and diplomatic world. In particular, we will show the necessity to compare the "micro" structure of relationships as mapped by the archive with the "macro" formal structure of the institution. Do the thousands of documents, in a distant reading approach (Moretti, 2013), confirm the internal organization of the League of Nations or do they show individuals/communities that bypass the official hierarchy?
As an opening to an epistemological debate, this research questions the relationship between the researcher, the database and its sources: are the metadata of an archive corpus usable information, regardless of their unique qualitative content? More technically, it also addresses the issue of data visualization and modeling in the historical sciences.
Keywords
Digital Humanities, Archives, Social Network Analysis
Publisher's website
Create date
25/08/2016 13:42
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:11
Usage data