What: Workshop "Critical perspectives on cultural heritage: Re-visiting
digitisation"
Where:
https://lnu-se.zoom.us/j/63272495423
When: 26 October, 9-12hrs
Organizers: The workshop is co-organized by Linnaeus University (Centre for Applied
Heritage<https://lnu.se/en/research/searchresearch/centre-for-applied-heritage/> and
iInstitute<https://lnu.se/en/research/searchresearch/iinstitute/>) and Swedish
National Heritage Board<https://www.raa.se/in-english/>
Website:
https://lnu.se/en/meet-linnaeus-university/current/events/2021/critical-per…
About: Today, the Semantic Web and Linked Open Data are creating new value for the
descriptive information in the cultural heritage sector. Libraries, museums, heritage
management and archives are seeing new possibilities in sharing by turning their
catalogues into open datasets that can be directly accessed, allowing cultural heritage
data to be circulated, navigated, analyzed and re-arranged at unprecedented levels. This
is supported by research funding bodies, governments and EU policies and numerous
political interests, resulting in enormous investment in digitization projects which make
cultural heritage information openly available and machine readable. But before deploying
this data, one must ask: is this data fit for deployment?
Libraries, museums, heritage management and archives have long histories. Both the
collections they house and the language they use(d) to describe said collections are
products of that historical legacy, shaped by, amongst others, institutionalized
colonialism, racism and patriarchy. Yet descriptive information is now being digitized and
shared as if that legacy is not inherent to the collections. Instead, existing units of
information are being distributed through new Web 3.0 technologies, bringing with it an
outdated knowledge-base. Besides the risk of progressive techniques being applied to
regressive content, we may also sacrifice the development of new knowledge in libraries,
museums, heritage management and archives aimed at facilitating socially sustainable
futures, remediating exploitative historical legacies.
For this workshop, we have invited researchers and practitioners to discuss ways in which
digitisation approaches may be set up to change the nature and legacy of cultural
collection prior to digital dissemination.
Welcome!
--
Professor Koraljka Golub
Head of iInstitute,
http://lnu.se/en//iinstitute/<http://lnu.se/en/iinstitute/>
Digital Humanities Programme Coordinator
Linnaeus University, Sweden
Website:
https://lnu.se/en/staff/koraljka.golub/
Pronoun: she