Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web

Under what conditions is it possible to define the identity of a territory on the Web? In this paper we explore the way entities with a clear-cut geographical existence (such as Bolivia) exist and are objectivized in a digital space like the Web. Our question is “should the mapping of a territorial...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Diego Landivar, Alexandre Monnin, Emilie Ramillien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Netcom Association 2016-05-01
Series:Netcom
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/netcom/2104
id doaj-4a287c10d13f4c9fab14b35656fb33f6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4a287c10d13f4c9fab14b35656fb33f62020-11-24T21:34:03ZengNetcom AssociationNetcom0987-60142016-05-0129329732410.4000/netcom.2104Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le webDiego LandivarAlexandre MonninEmilie RamillienUnder what conditions is it possible to define the identity of a territory on the Web? In this paper we explore the way entities with a clear-cut geographical existence (such as Bolivia) exist and are objectivized in a digital space like the Web. Our question is “should the mapping of a territorial entity on the Web and its traditional geographical representation converge?” In order to answer it, we set out an analysis which takes as its starting point the architecture of the Web, revolving around the notion of resource (objects identified on the Web). Therefrom, we conduct an anthropological analysis of the “modes of existence” (Etienne Souriau) of a country such as Bolivia on the Web. We use several digital methods in order to probe concrete examples of the networks of associations it elicits and show that, as a resource, its limits that are widely redefined on the Web, largely through the networks generated by online participation (blogs, commentaries, tweets, Wikipedia entries…). Bolivia can thence be described as a burgeoning, quite unstable, entity whose borders become rather imprecise. Yet, such a characterization also proves way more encompassing and richer than traditional (namely, geographic) ones.http://journals.openedition.org/netcom/2104ontologysemantic cartographyvisual analyticsWeb-architectureterritorydata
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diego Landivar
Alexandre Monnin
Emilie Ramillien
spellingShingle Diego Landivar
Alexandre Monnin
Emilie Ramillien
Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
Netcom
ontology
semantic cartography
visual analytics
Web-architecture
territory
data
author_facet Diego Landivar
Alexandre Monnin
Emilie Ramillien
author_sort Diego Landivar
title Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
title_short Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
title_full Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
title_fullStr Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
title_full_unstemmed Cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
title_sort cartographier l’ontologie d’un territoire sur le web
publisher Netcom Association
series Netcom
issn 0987-6014
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Under what conditions is it possible to define the identity of a territory on the Web? In this paper we explore the way entities with a clear-cut geographical existence (such as Bolivia) exist and are objectivized in a digital space like the Web. Our question is “should the mapping of a territorial entity on the Web and its traditional geographical representation converge?” In order to answer it, we set out an analysis which takes as its starting point the architecture of the Web, revolving around the notion of resource (objects identified on the Web). Therefrom, we conduct an anthropological analysis of the “modes of existence” (Etienne Souriau) of a country such as Bolivia on the Web. We use several digital methods in order to probe concrete examples of the networks of associations it elicits and show that, as a resource, its limits that are widely redefined on the Web, largely through the networks generated by online participation (blogs, commentaries, tweets, Wikipedia entries…). Bolivia can thence be described as a burgeoning, quite unstable, entity whose borders become rather imprecise. Yet, such a characterization also proves way more encompassing and richer than traditional (namely, geographic) ones.
topic ontology
semantic cartography
visual analytics
Web-architecture
territory
data
url http://journals.openedition.org/netcom/2104
work_keys_str_mv AT diegolandivar cartographierlontologiedunterritoiresurleweb
AT alexandremonnin cartographierlontologiedunterritoiresurleweb
AT emilieramillien cartographierlontologiedunterritoiresurleweb
_version_ 1725950775086022656