Access and Control in Digital Humanities

Access and Control in Digital Humanities

Hawkins, Shane

Taylor & Francis Ltd

05/2021

282

Mole

Inglês

9781032004396

15 a 20 dias

700

Descrição não disponível.
1. Introduction: access and control in digital humanities

Shane Hawkins

Part I. Access, Control, and DH in Academia

2. From Stone to Screen: the built-in obsolescence of digitization

Kaitlyn Solberg, Lisa Tweten, and Chelsea A. M. Gardner

3. Digital humanities and a new research culture: between promoting and practicing open research data

Urszula Pawlicka-Deger

Part II. Networks of Access and Control

4. Computational ontologies for accessing, controlling, and disseminating knowledge in the cultural heritage sector: a case study

John Roberto Rodriguez

5. Digital approaches to the 'Big Ancient Mediterranean'

Ryan Horne

6. Questioning authority: creation, use, and distribution of linked data in digital humanities

Lindsay Kistler Mattock & Anu Thapa

Part III. Access, Control and Immersive Media

7. Visuality as historical experience: immersive multi-directional narrative in the MIT Visualizing Cultures Project

Ellen Sebring

8. Architectonic connections: virtual reconstruction to disseminate understanding of South and Southeast Asian temples

David Beynon and Sambit Datta

9. Postscript on the Ctrl+Alt society: protocols for locative media

Brian Greenspan

Part IV. Access, Control, and Indigenous Knowledge

10. Cross-cultural collaborations in the digital world: a case study from the Great Lakes Research Alliance's Knowledge Sharing Database

Heidi Bohaker, Lisa Truong, and Kate Higginson

11. Issues and intersections of Indigenous knowledge protection and copyright for DH

Kim Paula Nayyer

Part V. Access, Control, and the Law

12. The open access spectrum: redefining the access discourse for the electronic editions of literary works

Setsuko Yokoyama

13. Ownership, copyright, and the ethics of the unpublished

Emily C. Friedman

14. Digital humanities research under United States and European copyright laws: evolving frameworks

Erik Ketzan and Pawel Kamocki

15. Trust is good, control is better? The GDPR and control over personal data in digital humanities research

Pawel Kamocki
Digital Humanities;Open Access Spectrum;Access;Open Research Data;Control;Kimberly Christen;Digital;Violates;Humanities;DH Research;Hawkins;Southeast Asian Temples;Mann;National Library;Copyright;LOD;Open access;GDPR;OA;Digital Humanists;Data;Cultural Heritage Sector;Reproduction;Computational Ontologies;Possession;LOD Project;Right;Open Science Movement;Legal;Ontology Learning;Technology;RDF;Technologies;Copyright Laws;Museums;PHP;Classrooms;InfoSoc Directive;Data Subject;Digital technology;Media Arts Centres;Surveillance Capitalism;European Data Protection Board;Manuscript Fiction