What are the implications of digital representation on intellectual property and ownership of cultural heritage? Are aspirations to preservation and accessibility in the digital space reconcilable with cultural sensitivities, colonized history, and cultural appropriation?
This volume brings together different perspectives from academics and practitioners of Cultural Heritage, to address current debates in the digitization and other computational study of cultural artifacts. From the tension between the materiality of cultural heritage objects and the intangible character of digital models, we explore larger issues in intellectual property, collection management, pedagogical practice, inclusion and accessibility, and the role of digital methods in decolonization and restitution debates.
The contributions include perspectives from a wide range of disciplines, addressing these questions within the study of the material culture of Africa, Europe, Asia, Oceania, and the Americas.
License
This is an Open Access book distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (unless stated otherwise), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Copyright is retained by the author(s).
Chapters
Introduction
Chiara Palladino & Gabriel BodardCeci n’est pas un temple. Visual secondary sources between representation and documentation
Valeria VitaleResearch resources of Japanese Mokkan: Turning information on ancient wooden tablets into research data
Hajime BabaDescription, translation and process: Making the implicit explicit in digital editions of ancient text-bearing objects
Martina Filosa et al.Looking beyond the text: Opportunities and challenges in the digitisation of Sanskrit inscriptions
Francesco BianchiniMateriality and community: Digital approaches to Ethiopic manuscript culture
Daria ElaginaCollaborative editing of sixteenth century Indigenous graphic manuscripts from Central Mexico
Hayley Woodward et al.Not the same landscape. Rediscussing digital approaches to premodern spatial knowledge systems
Chiara PalladinoFrom Virtual Reality to virtual restitution: How 3D-Egyptology can contribute to decolonizing the field and the question of digital copies vs the original
Rita LucarelliPreserving the intangible: The challenges and responsibilities of documenting material knowledge practices and skills through digital media
Paula Loreto Granados García & Ceri AshleySkulls, skin and names: The ethics of managing heritage collections data online
Rebecca Kahn & Rainer SimonDigital treatment of African cultural heritage: Shifting landmarks and implications for copyright exceptions for archives in Nigeria
Chijioke Okorie
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