As the primary output of the DataStories project, Dr. Feinberg has completed a book manuscript. The book, tentatively titled Rambles Through Everyday Data: A Travelogue and Field Guide, is under contract with MIT Press. The book demonstrates a practical, critical, and generative mode of thinking about data: its creation, management, aggregation, and use. Concurrently, the book establishes the widespread applicability of information science concepts for a diverse array of readers, across varied disciplinary backgrounds.
Each of the book’s seven chapters pairs an engaging, self-contained main essay—the travelogue—with a scholarly companion essay—the field guide. Each main essay begins with an anecdote, such as a visit to a library, running out of butter, or cooking rice on a different stove. Through sustained reflection on these everyday stories, the book argues that, to understand the power and pitfalls of data science, we must attend to the data itself, and not just the algorithms that we use to manipulate the data.
The book’s stories coalesce around the following themes:
• Data—whether collected and processed by machines or collected and processed by people—is the product of many acts of human interpretation. No system, manual or automated, can fully contain the dynamic creativity of all these aggregated data creators. Data, therefore, will always retain some ambiguity.
• By paying attention to how data works structurally, we can better understand this ambiguity: where it arises, how it manifests, and what we might want to do about it.
• We can, sometimes, constrain data ambiguity. These efforts always fail in some respects, and time undoes them, but we may want to employ them nonetheless.
• Like poetry, or music, or any form of human communication, data is reinterpreted—in a sense, remade—every time that it is used. Our engagement with its ambiguity is, therefore, an ongoing process. Data is a story that we read and reread; it is not an equation to be solved.
With its uniquely accessible, readable approach, the book aims to reach a wide audience of scholars, students, and the general public.