Visual Correspondence

Analysing Letters through Data Visualisation

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  • Visualizing Hemingway: A Man in Letters

    Visualizing Hemingway: A Man in Letters

    The John F. Kennedy Library have published a blog post on how Visual Correspondence's tools can illuminate the life of Ernest Hemingway. Using data from the Library's detailed finding aid, correspondence from over 50 years of the author's life has been collated and visualised on this site. Read the blog post here. or start visualising his letters.

  • Virginia Woolf

    Virginia Woolf

    Writers such as Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, and Ezra Pound, were collectively known as the Modernists. They were also in close contact with one another. Find out more about their social circles.

  • Patrick H. Pearse Letters

    Patrick H. Pearse Letters

    Before 1916, Padraig Pearse was an educational innovator, a writer, a powerful orator and advocate of the Irish language. After 1916 he became synonymous with the Easter Rising in Ireland. Find out more about his life through his letters.

  • Bram Stoker

    Bram Stoker

    Monsters inhabited every part of Bram Stoker's life. The Irishman who created Dracula was also as the personal assistant of the overbearing Shakespearean actor Henry Irving. Many see Irving as the model for the Transylvanian count. Find out more through Stoker's correspondence.

A line

Letters on this Date

  • From Nordquist, Lawrence and Olive To Hemingway, Ernest (1931)
  • From Besso, Michele To Einstein, Albert (1915)
  • From Craig, Percy To Shorter, Clement King (1915)
  • From Cullen, Dr William (1780)
  • From Masefield, John To Gregory, Lady Augusta (1903)
  • From Clemens, Samuel L. To Rosenthal, A. (1905)
  • From Kendler, Marion von To Clemens, Samuel L. (1905)
  • From Mark Twain Club To Clemens, Samuel L. (1879)

More letters for 11th December

Letter writing is a rich and ancient form of communication. It offers deep insights into the thoughts, feelings and experiences of people from every walk of life in a more immediate way than almost any other medium. As well as the content of letters, the set of circumstances surrounding a letter's creation, transmission and reception tells a story in itself.

Data visualisation strives to make sense of the large and complex, condensing and clarifying complicated data in a single image. It can achieve an impact that words simply cannot replicate.

Visual Correspondence uses data visualisation to makes sense of a person's life through their correspondence. Who they wrote to, who wrote to them, when and where - these flashes of detail unveil a rich narrative about people and our past through images.

As well as providing tools to visualise huge collections of correspondence, in bringing together detail on 165327 letters from 56 collections, Visual Correspondence provides a new way to explore the letters themselves. Links to the full text of the letters are provided were possible and added information helps put the letters in context. Hopefully in exploring this site, you will start to see correspondence in a new way.

Choose a collection and start to visualise

Niall O'Leary Services accepts no liability in respect of the accuracy of data on this website. All data on this site is presented as is and visitors use it at their own risk. Outside of metadata no letter content has been used on this website. All letters and detail on all people's letters are listed.