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October 29: Amanda Visconti, “Public + Participatory: Infinite Ulysses and a more open humanities”

Posted by on Saturday, October 29, 2016 in Event Archives, Fall 2016 Colloquium.

Curb Center, Saturday, October 29, 10:00 am

Keynote Address for Vanderbilt THATCamp

Public + Participatory: Infinite Ulysses and a more open humanities

We need more digital humanities projects that aren’t just hypothetically accessible to the public (“we put it on the web: everyone can now use it”), but are designed for supporting, valuing, and growing from participation by multiple publics. From a grounding of DH meaningful crowdsourcing and participatory design, this talk describes a pragmatic approach to a speculative experiment: What if we build a digital literary edition and invite everyone? What if millions of not just scholars, but also first-time readers, book clubs, teachers and their students, and literary enthusiasts show up and annotate a complex literary text with their “infinite” interpretations, questions, and contextualizations?

 InfiniteUlysses.com, a participatory platform for reading and socially annotating James Joyce’s challenging novel Ulysses, uses design, coding, and usertesting to investigate how digital humanities interfaces can better support and value public participation. We’ll examine how these activities function as critical humanities methods. The ways public participation can be richly meaningful to both the public and scholars are under-acknowledged, so we’ll also explore the ways a project like Infinite Ulysses can create new knowledge for both audiences.

The Speaker

Amanda Visconti, "Public + Participatory: Infinite Ulysses and a more open humanities"

Dr. Amanda Visconti is a digital humanities assistant professor and librarian at Purdue University Libraries. Her 2015 literature dissertation, Dr.AmandaVisconti.com, produced the InfiniteUlysses.com participatory digital edition by combining literary studies and textual scholarship with digital methodologies (design, code, usertesting) and publication forms (regular blog posts, whitepaper written during the month before her defense). She serves as an executive council member for the ACH, and as an editor and ombudsperson for The Programming Historian DH lesson platform. You can follow her @Literature_Geek, read her regular DH blogging at LiteratureGeek.com, or join her and others in the discussions on the Digital Humanities Slack (tinyurl.com/DHslack).

 

THATCamp

The Vanderbilt THATCamp (The Humanities And Technology Camp) is an unconference co-sponsored by the Robert Penn Warren Center for the Humanities, the Center for Second Language Studies, the Curb Center, and the Jean and Alexander Heard Library.

Events in the Vanderbilt Digital Humanities Colloquium series are free and open to the public.  The series is sponsored by the Vanderbilt Center for Digital Humanities, with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. For more information, please see the Center website, as.vanderbilt.edu/digitalhumanities/ .

 

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