Quantifying world geography as seen through the lens of Soviet propaganda
Cultural data typically contains a variety of biases. In particular, geographical locations are unequally portrayed in media, creating a distorted representation of the world. Identifying and measuring such biases is crucial to understand both the data and the socio-cultural processes that have prod...
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Zusammenfassung: | Cultural data typically contains a variety of biases. In particular,
geographical locations are unequally portrayed in media, creating a distorted
representation of the world. Identifying and measuring such biases is crucial
to understand both the data and the socio-cultural processes that have produced
them. Here we suggest to measure geographical biases in a large historical news
media corpus by studying the representation of cities. Leveraging ideas of
quantitative urban science, we develop a mixed quantitative-qualitative
procedure, which allows us to get robust quantitative estimates of the biases.
These biases can be further qualitatively interpreted resulting in a
hermeneutic feedback loop. We apply this procedure to a corpus of the Soviet
newsreel series 'Novosti Dnya' (News of the Day) and show that city
representation grows super-linearly with city size, and is further biased by
city specialization and geographical location. This allows to systematically
identify geographical regions which are explicitly or sneakily emphasized by
Soviet propaganda and quantify their importance. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.15938 |