May 21, 2024
Contesting, Remaking, and Reimagining Absence among and with Digital Methods: A 3-Project Based Examination
- 12:00 to 13:00
- Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch
- Digital Humanities
- Julianne Nyhan (Technische Universität Darmstadt)
In three recent projects I have explored how digital methods may not only function to reinscribe archival and collection dynamics like bias, absence and loss in new digital contexts but also how they may to reactivate those dynamics in our interlinked and apparently ever more powerful digital environments. This talk will reflect both on the emistemological challenges that arise at the intersection of critical heritage, oral history and digital history, and the ways that digital methods may, as part of a wider mixed-methods methodological bundle, seek to contest, remake and reimagine absence. More specifically, this talk will explore 3 recently completed or ongoing projects, namely: the Towards a National Collection-funded "The Sloane Lab: looking back to build future shared collections", of which I am PI; my recent book Nyhan, Julianne. Hidden and Devalued Feminized Labour in the Digital Humanities: On the Index Thomisticus Project 1965-67. Digital Research in the Arts and Humanities. New York: Routledge, 2022; and, together with Dr Andrew Flinn (UCL), our ongoing work towards a new Oral History paradigm, called "Multimodal Digital Oral History (MDOH)"
Bio
Prof. Dr. Julianne Nyhan is Chair of Humanities Data Science and Methodology, TU Darmstadt and and Managing Director of the Institute of History, TU Darmstadt, Germany. She remains a part-time Professor of Digital Humanities, UCL, UK, where she leads the Arts and Humanities Research Council Towards a National Collection-funded “The Sloane Lab: looking back to build future shared collections”. She has published widely, especially the history of digital humanities and oral history and she is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, UK. Her most recent book is: Nyhan, Julianne. Hidden and Devalued Feminized Labour in the Digital Humanities: On the Index Thomisticus Project 1965-67. Routledge, 2023. Together with Dr Andrew Flinn and Dr Andreas Vlachidis, she has recently been awarded funding for the AHRC-DFG bilateral project (2024-27): “Mixed-methods Digital Oral History: enfolding semantic web technologies and historical-interpretative analysis to better understand narratives of formation, disruption and change in the history of computing in the Humanities”
Contact and Registration
All are welcome to attend, regardless of prior experience of the digital humanities. Registration is required for external participants.
This event will take place in person and on Zoom: tinyurl.com/maydhbbl
If you have questions, or to register, please contact one of the organizers listed above.