From Diaries to Data Doubles. Self-Tracking in Dutch Diaries (1780-1940)

被引:3
|
作者
Vermeer, Leonieke [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Dept Hist, Groningen, Netherlands
关键词
Diaries; self-tracking; technologies of the self; ableism; Dutch history;
D O I
10.1080/14484528.2021.1971057
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
In recent years self-tracking technologies have become widely adopted. Life-writing scholars have contributed to the burgeoning academic interest in this phenomenon and pointed to similarities between the diary and present-day self-tracking apps, wearables and our digital 'data doubles' resulting from networked technology. However, studies on self-tracking in historical diaries are rare. In this article, I focus on experiences of self-tracking in five Dutch diaries from the long nineteenth century (1780-1940). Self-tracking includes all sorts of ways in which people have turned their bodies, minds, and habits into data. I have constrained my analysis of self-tracking in diaries to two bodily aspects: firstly, masturbation in connection with sleeping habits and, secondly, the menstrual cycle and birth control. The diaries show that the 'quantified self' in effect often becomes the 'qualified self', because tracking data involves interpretation, identity meanings and storytelling. The most important link between self-tracking in the stories told, both in historical paper diaries and in present-day forms, is the discourse of 'ableism'. Ability as a norm takes shape in the long nineteenth century with the diary as a key 'technology of the self' in which the responsible, self-governing individual monitors his or her own health and wellbeing.
引用
收藏
页码:215 / 240
页数:26
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Making art from self-tracking cycling data
    O'Neill, Shaleph J.
    [J]. DIGITAL CREATIVITY, 2018, 29 (04) : 249 - 263
  • [2] Data Aggregation as Social Relations: Making Datasets from Self-Tracking Data
    Nafus, Dawn
    [J]. EUROPEAN REVIEW, 2019, 27 (03) : 440 - 454
  • [3] From data fetishism to quantifying selves: Self-tracking practices and the other values of data
    Sharon, Tamar
    Zandbergen, Dorien
    [J]. NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY, 2017, 19 (11) : 1695 - 1709
  • [4] MELLO: Medical lifelog ontology for data terms from self-tracking and lifelog devices
    Kim, Hye Hyeon
    Lee, Soo Youn
    Baik, Su Youn
    Kim, Ju Han
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS, 2015, 84 (12) : 1099 - 1110
  • [5] From self-tracking to smart urban infrastructures: Towards an interdisciplinary research agenda on Big Data
    Klauser, Francisco
    Albrechtslund, Anders
    [J]. SURVEILLANCE & SOCIETY, 2014, 12 (02) : 273 - 286
  • [6] Self-tracking Reloaded: Applying Process Mining to Personalized Health Care from Labeled Sensor Data
    Sztyler, Timo
    Carmona, Josep
    Voelker, Johanna
    Stuckenschmidt, Heiner
    [J]. TRANSACTIONS ON PETRI NETS AND OTHER MODELS OF CONCURRENCY XI, 2016, 9930 : 160 - 180
  • [7] Relationship Between the Menstrual Cycle and Timing of Ovulation Revealed by New Protocols: Analysis of Data from a Self-Tracking Health App
    Sohda, Satoshi
    Suzuki, Kenta
    Igari, Ichiro
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2017, 19 (11)
  • [8] A validation study comparing self-reported travel diaries and objective data obtained from in-vehicle monitoring devices in older drivers with bilateral cataract
    Agramunt, Seraina
    Meuleners, Lynn
    Chow, Kyle Chi
    Ng, Jonathon Q.
    Morlet, Nigel
    [J]. ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION, 2017, 106 : 492 - 497
  • [9] NOVEL DATA CAPTURE METHOD FOR THE IDENTIFICATION OF POTENTIAL FLARE EVENTS IN CHRONIC DISEASES VIA PATIENT SELF-TRACKING: INSIGHTS FROM USE CASE IN SICKLE CELL DISEASE (SCD)
    Luo, N.
    Anwar, H.
    Healey, A.
    Kean, J.
    Zhang, C.
    [J]. VALUE IN HEALTH, 2023, 26 (06) : S304 - S304