This series welcomes a range of speakers interested in the intersections between collections as data, cataloguing histories and critical archival studies, heritage infrastructures, critical digital heritage, and information science.
Speakers:
Rosemary Grennan, Mayday Rooms archive
Title: Leftovers Digital Archive: Somewhere between automation and the handmade.
Amalia S Levi, Archivist/Cultural heritage Professional, HeritEdge Connection, Bonn University's Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies
Title: Archival Dependencies: The Cascading Violence of Colonial Records.
please note, not all speaker gave permission for their whole presentation to be recorded.
17
11/29/2023
This series welcomes a range of speakers interested in the intersections between collections as data, cataloguing histories and critical archival studies, heritage infrastructures, critical digital heritage, and information science.
Speakers:
Jane Collings (Steevenson), Archivist, Archival Cataloguing
Title: The Shortcomings of and Opportunities for Archival Cataloguing to Create a Fuller Picture of Our Histories.
Please note, not all speakers gave permission for their whole presentation to be recorded.
10
11/29/2023
This series welcomes a range of speakers interested in the intersections between collections as data, cataloguing histories and critical archival studies, heritage infrastructures, critical digital heritage, and information science.
Speakers:
Lucille Junkere, Visual artist, educator and researcher. Recent research focusses on the legacy of colonialism in African Caribbean textile history.
Title: Cultural Colours Jamaica
Benjamin Lee, incoming Assistant Professor in the Information School at the University of Washington, as well as a Kluge Fellow in Digital Studies at the Library of Congress
Title: Reimagining Search and Discovery for Digital Collections with Machine Learning.
Please note not all speakers gave permission for their whole talk to be recorded.
13
11/29/2023
This series welcomes a range of speakers interested in the intersections between collections as data, cataloguing histories and critical archival studies, heritage infrastructures, critical digital heritage, and information science.
Speakers:
Koraljka Golub, Professor, iInstitute, Linnaeus University, co-leader of LNU's Digital Humanities Initiative, programme coordinator for M.A. in Digital Humanities
Title: Subject access in online information services for humanities: the case of LGBTQI fiction.
Inna Kizhner, Research Fellow, Digital Humanities Lab, Haifa University
Title: Exploring epistemic bias in museum collections.
Please note, not all speakers gave permission for their whole presentation to be recorded.
9
11/29/2023
This series welcomes a range of speakers interested in the intersections between collections as data, cataloguing histories and critical archival studies, heritage infrastructures, critical digital heritage, and information science.
Speakers:
Kathleen Lawther, Freelance Curator/Collections Researcher
Title: People make the data: Museum Makers, people-centred cataloguing and collections as data.
Florence Okoye, Qualitative researcher, User Experience and Service designer, Natural History Museum
Title: Approaches for anti-colonial narratives through digital collections.
Please note, not all speakers gave permission for the whole of their presentation to be recorded.
32
11/29/2023
Founded in 2010, the UCL Centre for Digital Humanities (UCLDH) is a cross-faculty research centre, bringing together a vibrant network of people who teach and research in a wide range of disciplines, in the heart of London.
UCLDH draws on UCL's world-class research strength especially in information studies, computing science, and the arts and humanities. It supports and coordinates work in many institutional settings throughout the university, including the library services, museums and collections. The research facilitated by UCLDH takes place at the intersection of digital technologies and humanities. It produces applications and models that make possible new kinds of research, both in the humanities disciplines and in computer science and its applied technologies. It also studies the impact of these techniques on cultural heritage, museums, libraries, archives, and culture at large.
257
6/9/2023
With Riva Quiroga (Programming Historian)
1368
3/11/2021
Zephyr Frank (Stanford University) describes and discusses a series of DH projects that have developed at CESTA and have addressed major issues in the history of the Atlantic World, including slavery and the experience of enslaved and freed persons in particular.
150
2/24/2021