An abstract artwork shows white lines across blue squares on an offwhite background.
Seminar
Ancient Data and Its Divisions

On May 30th, 2024, as part of the Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Series, "The Data that Divides Us: Recalibrating Data Methods for New Knowledge Frameworks Across the Humanities", at the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA) at Stanford University, Chiara Palladino from Furman University, Chris Johanson from University of California, Los Angeles, and Eric Harvey from Stanford University talked about the ways they envision 'Ancient Data' and the challenges they face working with it. 

Previous seminars in our series have attended to divisions, but also possibilities, engendered by data along various fault lines and contexts (from 19th-century statistical thinking to biases in archives, from the challenges of quantification to the history of data governance). With this seminar on "Ancient Data" we focus on what happens to ancient sources—textual, material and visual—when digitized and turned into data, and what it means for the study of antiquity to operate in a digital environment and making use of digital tools. 

How do we work and reimagine the data and information lost? What can the recent digital and computational technologies offer as answers to such questions? How do we develop new software or programming that serves the specific questions of ancient data? How do we work with the divides between the temporalities and data-sizes of our contemporary world and the Classical world? 

Dr. Eric Harvey, Professors Chiara Palladino and Chris Johanson examine and analyze ancient texts and artifacts through a variety of digital programs, from Ancient Greek and Latin spatial narratives to Biblical psalms and archeological sites.


About the Speakers

Chiara Palladino is Assistant Professor of Classics at Furman University, Chair of the Interdisciplinary Minor in Ancient Greek and Roman Studies, and currently a fellow for the LECTIO Network at KU Leuven. With a background in Classical Philology, Dr. Palladino started working on digital and computational methods in 2016, when she joined the Alexander von Humboldt Chair of Digital Humanities at the University of Leipzig. Since then, she has specialized in the analysis of premodern spatial narratives and in the development of AI models for the automatic analysis of Ancient Greek texts. Her collaborations include some of the most important Digital Classics initiatives, such as the Perseus Digital Library, the Pelagios Network, and the Digital Classicist Wiki. She is also regularly featured as a lecturer in the open access Sunoikisis Digital Classics Seminars and in the Digital Humanities Summer Institute at the University of Victoria. Her current research embraces the fields of text alignment, Named Entity Recognition, Sentiment Analysis, geospatial modeling, and semantic annotation. Her most recent book, Can’t Touch This: Digital Approaches to Materiality in Cultural Heritage, co-edited with Gabriel Bodard and published in Open Access by Ubiquity Press, examines important epistemological and ethical issues in the digital representation of cultural heritage of the premodern world.

Chris Johanson is Associate Professor in the UCLA Department of Classics, Chair and founding faculty of the UCLA Digital Humanities Program, and Interim Faculty Director of Innovative Applications in Data Science for UCLA DataX. His research explores the ancient Graeco-Roman world—its extant literature, texts of all kinds, and its material record—using data visualization, network analysis, 2 and 3D representation and real-time interaction. He directs RomeLab, a multi-disciplinary research group whose work uses the physical and virtual city of Rome as a point of departure to study the interrelationship between historical phenomena and the spaces and places of the ancient city. He has collaborated on mapping and visualization projects set in Bolivia, Peru, Albania, Iceland, Spain, Turkey and Italy. His research has received funding from Mellon, the NEH, the MacArthur Foundation, the Ahmanson Foundation, and Google.

Eric Harvey holds a PhD in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies from Brandeis University with a specialization in Bible and the Ancient Near East. He is a once-and-future postdoc at CESTA and a current Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies. His research areas include material processes of textual transmission, blindness and disability in the ancient Middle East, and the political economy of myth and ritual. He also works to increase the accessibility of ancient studies to disabled students and scholars, and will soon rejoin CESTA to co-direct the NEH-funded Braille in Ancient Studies project with Mark Algee-Hewitt.

Join the colloquy
Colloquy

The Data that Divides Us: Methods and Frameworks for Data Across the Humanities

What is data in the humanities? What relationships do humanists have with data? What is the place of data in humanistic inquiry? These questions are pressing in our era of rapid technological transformation, one which is increasingly predicated on creating and consuming data at ever larger scales. With the rapidly growing power of data over various aspects of our lives, it has been said that "data is the new oil." And as data science increasingly moves into interdisciplinary spaces, humanists’ perspectives are essential.

more

Flagship humanistic journals in a variety of disciplines—History and Theory, Critical Inquiry, American Historical Review and New Literary History—have recently published special issues on data, reflecting on data as a new structural condition and using humanities methods to illuminate the constructed nature of data. But for far longer the "digital humanities" (DH) has been the space where, most explicitly and intentionally, humanists have worked with data, as Miriam Posner wrote in 2015 in Humanities Data as a necessary contradiction. While the term DH is now commonly accepted, even as it refers to many kinds of work in many different fields, we are still at pains to define what exactly the “digital” is, and how one kind of digital work might be in conversation with another. Yet data might be the key. The stakes of defining the digital might not need to center the taxonomic or the programmatic—although as humanists and educators, we do care about those things. Rather, the stakes of the digital are frequently found in the way in which it invites us to confront our relationship to data—and, it turns out, humanists have many, deeply varied relationships to data.

Our relationships to data are fraught at all stages: capturing, collecting, or making data; “cleaning” or “munging” data; preserving, recording, archiving or storing data; analyzing, understanding, or interpreting data; using, manipulating, abusing, contesting, or resisting data--our practices, and our names for those practices, are rooted in commitments, both political and epistemic, that can be challenging to unpack. What does humanistic data look like? What should it look like? And what can we learn about data and humanities when we deliberately ask these questions across disciplines, institutions, and time periods--when a historian confronts the data practices of a literary critic, or a classicist looks at the data originally collected for scientists?

At the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA) at Stanford we began in 2020 a conversation about data and the humanities in the Workshop "Critical Data Practices" (funded by Stanford Humanities Center). In 2023-2024, thanks to a Mellon Foundation grant, we continued and expanded on that conversation to include outside invited speakers and to support a postdoctoral researcher and two graduate dissertation fellows with the Mellon Sawyer Seminar Series “The Data That Divides Us.” Hosted by CESTA, this year-long seminar asked participants to interrogate how historical assumptions about data continue to shape modern divisions and, paradoxically, might offer new avenues for bridging them. (See the full schedule here.) Taking a deliberately historical and transdisciplinary approach, the seminar as a whole explored the underlying assumptions in the collection, conceptualization, and application of data as these have developed in the last three centuries. What latent bias might historical data carry undetected into our present moment? How has this data shaped contemporary manifestations of historical divisions even as it has created new social, cultural, and political fissures? And how might data help us to redress or speak across the very divisions that it has engendered? These are of the kind questions best tackled in conversations across disciplines and expertise, and we have been fortunate to draw on a community of librarians, archivists, graduate students, faculty, and data activists in this work.

In this Colloquy we share various outcomes of our "The Data that Divides Us" conversation. We include video recordings of visitors’ presentations and written responses to these talks by other seminar participants. We also feature a piece written for the concluding symposium by Chloé Brault, one of the Seminar’s Dissertation Fellows and a PhD Candidate in Comparative Literature, in which she synthesizes the major themes and conversations of the year. And we include a post-seminar interview, led by Nichole Nomura (Seminar’s Postdoctoral Researcher, and now lecturer in the English Department at Stanford) and Matt Warner (Seminar’s Dissertation Fellow, and now lecturer in the English Department at Stanford) with the Mellon Sawyer Seminar’s PIs: Giovanna Ceserani (Classics), Mark Algee-Hewitt (English), Laura Stokes (History), and Grant Parker (Classics and African and African American Studies). The interview reflects on the lessons of the year, and answers the hardest question of all: is data singular or plural?

These reflections underscore the notion that data, in the humanities, is more than a tool. It is a site of inquiry, a cultural artifact, and often a point of tension. Through collective examination, we find that our relationships to data invite us not only to question what we know but also to explore how we know it, taking us to a space of humanistic inquiry where data both divides and connects us, drawing disparate practices and perspectives into critical conversation.

Join the Colloquy

My Colloquies are shareables: Curate personal collections of blog posts, book chapters, videos, and journal articles and share them with colleagues, students, and friends.

My Colloquies are open-ended: Develop a Colloquy into a course reader, use a Colloquy as a research guide, or invite participants to join you in a conversation around a Colloquy topic.

My Colloquies are evolving: Once you have created a Colloquy, you can continue adding to it as you browse Arcade.