Communities of Practice, the Methodological Commons, and Digital Self-Determination in the Humanities
Addressing a larger context of trends shaping and influencing change in the humanities and the cultures of the university, this text follows the Antonio Zampolli Prize Lecture given on 2 July 2014 at U Lausanne, exploring and encouraging the digital…
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Version 1.0 - published on 13 Jun 2022 doi: 10.25547/7YYS-QW19 - cite this
Licensed under Creative Commons BY 4.0
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Addressing a larger context of trends shaping and influencing change in the humanities and the cultures of the university, this text follows the Antonio Zampolli Prize Lecture given on 2 July 2014 at U Lausanne, exploring and encouraging the digital humanities' positive role in the process of the humanities' digital self-determination in the digital realm. Considered in this engagement are: the important (and profitably-elusive) process of defining digital humanities; foundational notions of the methodological commons and communities of practice, and the ways in which they originate, are fostered, are engaged, and themselves engage; and the value of an open approach to current and future work on modeling humanistic data and process, in ways that build on these foundations to embrace the communities and constituencies served by the humanities.
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Original publication information:
Originally published in Digital Studies/Le champ numérique
Date: June 4, 2016
DOI: http://doi.org/10.16995/dscn.31
License: (CC BY 4.0)
Original citation:
Siemens (Founding Editor, Editor 2008-2010), R. (2016). Communities of practice, the methodological commons, and digital self-determination in the Humanities. Digital Studies/le Champ Numérique, 5(3). DOI: http://doi.org/10.16995/dscn.31
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