Decolonizing Data Visualization: A History and Future of Indigenous Data Visualization

January O'Connor, Marko Parman, Nicole Bowman, Stephanie D. H. Evergreen
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Abstract

On the whole, the field of data visualization is white. Contemporary views of historical data visualization tend to trace back to a few iconic visuals tied to European wars and conquests. The modern explosion of the field has been centered around the ideas of white men, as if they invented data visualization. Yet, Indigenous populations world-wide have been incorporating data visualization into their record keeping for centuries before anyone had heard of Edward Tufte. In this article, three Indigenous evaluators (Mohican/Munsee, Cherokee, and Tlingit) along with a non-Indigenous co-conspirator, will discuss their journeys creating space to weave together Western notions of data visualization best practices and Indigenous ways of knowing and storytelling. The authors focus their evaluative work on the support of Indigenous communities and will reflect on what has worked in communicating data, what hasn't, and how far data visualization has to go in all four directions.
非殖民化数据可视化:本土数据可视化的历史和未来
总体而言,数据可视化领域是一片空白。当代对历史数据可视化的看法倾向于追溯到一些与欧洲战争和征服有关的标志性视觉效果。该领域的现代爆发一直围绕着白人的想法,就好像他们发明了数据可视化。然而,在人们听说爱德华·塔夫特之前,世界各地的土著居民已经将数据可视化纳入他们的记录保存中了几个世纪。在这篇文章中,三位土著评估者(莫希干人/芒西人、切罗基人和特林吉特人)将与一位非土著合作者一起讨论他们的旅程,为将西方数据可视化最佳实践的概念与土著的认识和讲故事的方式结合起来创造空间。作者将他们的评估工作集中在对土著社区的支持上,并将反思在数据交流方面哪些是有效的,哪些是无效的,以及数据可视化在这四个方向上要走多远。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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