The Memorial Afterlives of Online Crowdsourcing

IF 0.5 Q1 HISTORY Public History Review Pub Date : 2023-08-16 DOI:10.5130/phrj.v30i0.8048
Ann M. Foster, James Wallis
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Abstract

From May 2014 to March 2019 the Imperial War Museums launched a large-scale digital crowdsourcing project, ‘Lives of the First World War’. ‘Lives’ melded official and unofficial datasets to create an integrated database of people who had participated in the First World War. Over the course of the project 7.7 million individual histories were collected. After the initial collection phase, ‘Lives’ became a permanent digital memorial and database. This article investigates how ‘Lives’ contributed to public understandings of the First World War during and after its centenary. While undoubtedly an impressive and difficult undertaking, this article suggests that large scale data collection as a methodology on its own will replicate collection biases, unless married with specific collection drives. In the case of the First World War, this means that global majority narratives are subsumed by white British ones, at the expense of historically realistic data. The skewed datasets that come from large crowdsourced projects have widespread implications for cultural memories of events if they are to be digitally preserved within national collections.
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在线众包的纪念余生
从2014年5月到2019年3月,帝国战争博物馆推出了一个大型数字众包项目“第一次世界大战的生活”Lives将官方和非官方数据集融合在一起,创建了一个关于第一次世界大战参与者的综合数据库。在项目过程中,收集了770万份个人历史。在最初的收集阶段之后,“生命”成为了一个永久的数字纪念馆和数据库。这篇文章调查了《生活》如何在第一次世界大战一百周年期间和之后促进公众对第一次世界战争的理解。尽管这无疑是一项令人印象深刻且困难的工作,但本文表明,大规模数据收集作为一种方法论本身将复制收集偏见,除非与特定的收集驱动相结合。以第一次世界大战为例,这意味着全球多数派的叙事被英国白人的叙事所包容,而牺牲了历史上现实的数据。来自大型众包项目的扭曲数据集,如果要在国家收藏中以数字方式保存,对事件的文化记忆有着广泛的影响。
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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审稿时长
52 weeks
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