Abstract
How do we make sense of urban life in the past? What do we do when we study urban history, and to what extent do our methods fully capture the complexities of historical city living? These are crucial questions for any scholar interested in the historical dimensions of urban experience. Notwithstanding the interest of most urban historians in the relationship between the physical form of urban space and its experience by inhabitants and visitors, very few scholars have written histories that systematically integrate these two areas of inquiry. In this chapter, we argue that such research requires a method and an accompanying tool that can analyze historical urban life in a more integrated, holistic way. We propose a way forward by introducing the Time Machine platform as a scalable data visualization and analysis tool for researching everyday urban experience across space and time. To illustrate the potential we focus on a case study: the area of the Bloemstraat in early modern Amsterdam. Unpacking a section of the Bloemstraat, house by house and room by room, we show how the Time Machine forms an instrument to connect spatial layouts to the arrangement of objects and to the practical and social use of the space by the inhabitants and visitors. We also sketch how this tool illuminates more dynamic spatial and temporal practices such as how people, goods, and activities are connected to locations in the wider city and beyond.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Visual and Multimodal Urban Sociology |
| Subtitle of host publication | Part A |
| Editors | Luc Pauwels |
| Place of Publication | Leeds |
| Publisher | Emerald Publishing Limited |
| Volume | 18A |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 978-1-83909-968-7 |
| ISBN (Print) | 978-1-83909-969-4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2023 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Publication series
| Name | Research in Urban Sociology |
|---|
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Unpacking Urban Life in the Past: “Time Machine” as a Data Visualization and Analysis Tool'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Research output
- 1 Inaugural speech
-
Hoe de Was eens Was: Over de Rol van Bewijs, Perspectief en Experiment in het Schrijven van Onzichtbare Geschiedenissen
van den Heuvel, D., 2025, Utrecht University. 32 p.Translated title of the contribution :Laundry Stories.: On the Role of Evidence, Perspective and Experiment in writing Invisible Histories. Research output: Book/Report › Inaugural speech › Academic
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