Visualizing Holocaust Testimony
Start Date
15-10-2014 8:30 AM
End Date
15-10-2014 10:00 AM
Description
Oral testimonies by Holocaust survivors are crucial documents of historical events and personal experience. They are also very moving, emotional narratives. In 2014, the Holocaust Geographies Collaborative, an international research group of historians and geographers, shifted their focus from using GIS and conventional mapping to seeking new methods for visualizing and analyzing survivors’ testimonies, drawing on the over 52,000 oral testimonies in the Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive. Our research team at Middlebury College has taken a bottom-up approach to a few sample testimonies. By listening over and over to these stories, using a variety of manual and computer-based methods, we have teased out the spatio-temporal information they contain, while also diagramming the narrative structure of each interview. Our initial results demonstrate the value of slow thinking in the early stages of research, a process we have come to call inductive visualization; the potential to retain the nuance and depth of human experience while seeking spatio-temporal patterns; the serious challenges digital methods pose when working with emotional, narrative material; and the value of developing an intimate relationship with one’s historical sources. Our work has also shown that collaboration is essential for developing creative solutions to research problems.
Type
Presentation
Session
#s1: Multi-modal Narratives and Cultural Engagement
Language
eng
Location
Elaine Langone Center, Center Room
Visualizing Holocaust Testimony
Elaine Langone Center, Center Room
Oral testimonies by Holocaust survivors are crucial documents of historical events and personal experience. They are also very moving, emotional narratives. In 2014, the Holocaust Geographies Collaborative, an international research group of historians and geographers, shifted their focus from using GIS and conventional mapping to seeking new methods for visualizing and analyzing survivors’ testimonies, drawing on the over 52,000 oral testimonies in the Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive. Our research team at Middlebury College has taken a bottom-up approach to a few sample testimonies. By listening over and over to these stories, using a variety of manual and computer-based methods, we have teased out the spatio-temporal information they contain, while also diagramming the narrative structure of each interview. Our initial results demonstrate the value of slow thinking in the early stages of research, a process we have come to call inductive visualization; the potential to retain the nuance and depth of human experience while seeking spatio-temporal patterns; the serious challenges digital methods pose when working with emotional, narrative material; and the value of developing an intimate relationship with one’s historical sources. Our work has also shown that collaboration is essential for developing creative solutions to research problems.