Mashups and Matters of Concern: Generative Approaches to Digital Collections
Author(s) -
Mitchell Whitelaw
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
open library of humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-6700
DOI - 10.16995/olh.291
Subject(s) - mashup , expansive , generative grammar , affordance , trace (psycholinguistics) , computer science , generative model , data science , key (lock) , range (aeronautics) , world wide web , artificial intelligence , human–computer interaction , web service , engineering , linguistics , philosophy , compressive strength , materials science , computer security , composite material , aerospace engineering , web standards
This article discusses two practical experiments in remaking collections. Drifter (2016) and Succession (2014) build on the affordances of machine-readable collections and APIs to harvest large datasets from diverse sources, and show how these sources can be re-deployed to address complex spatiotemporal sites. These projects demonstrate the potential of a mashup-like generative approach based on sampling and recombination. Such approaches generate an expansive range of unforeseeable outcomes, while retaining a highly authored character. Here these projects are analysed through three key constituents: the troublesome trace of data; their extraction of digital samples; and their generative recomposition of samples into emergent outcomes. These techniques remake collections in a way that addresses the intrinsically complex, entangled and heterogeneous nature of what Latour terms ‘matters of concern’.
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