Universität Leipzig
22nd of July to 2nd of August 2013
Culture
and technology should not be understood as referring to computer
science applied to cultural studies. The central concern are the
Humanities, which are concerned with culture in the broadest sense.
Those fields within the Humanities that integrate technologies and
computing in their research and which are at least potentially in
dialogue with the questions posed by the Digital Humanities are our
privileged addressees.
The school was originally conceived as "European" in order to
emphasise the object of promoting and developing the Digital Humanities
within a European context. The applications of participation submitted
for the 2. Summer School demonstrated clearly, however, that the Summer
School was already acknowledged as an institution in Europe, qua an
established European institution.
The adjective "European" underlines, furthermore, the generally multilingual and multicultural nature of scientific research.
The
Summer School „Culture & Technology“ aims to find a remedy to the
situation described under "Background". In fact, in bringing together
young scholars from the Humanities, Engineering and Information
Sciences, it creates the conditions for future project-oriented
collaboration and networking across the borders of the individual
disciplines.
The Summer School seeks to offer a space for the discussion and acquisition of new knowledge, skills and competences in those computer technologies which play a central role in Humanities Computing and which determine every day more and more the work done in the Humanities and Cultural Sciences, as well as in Libraries and Archives everywhere.
The Summer School aims at integrating these activities into the broader context of the Digital Humanities, where questions about the consequences and implications of the application of computational methods and tools to cultural artefacts of all kinds are asked. The Summer School plans to show-case possible realisations of such questions via the presentation of concrete projects.
The Summer School will offer Humanities students in particular the possibility to gain practical knowledge of the application of computational methods to the digitalisation, description, analysis and production of humanities contents and artefacts (languages, texts, images, etc.), to discuss related theoretical questions and to forge new perspectives on the study and preservation of languages, cultures and cultural memory and the translation between cultures.
Computer and Engineering Sciences’ students, for their part, will be given the opportunity at the Summer School to acquire insights into the nature of humanities data, to get to know the areas in the Arts and Humanities in which computational methods are employed, to learn to recognise the difference of the Humanities approach to these methods and to confront themselves with the challenges that work with diffuse and extremely complex data presents for soft- and hardware solutions.
The Summer School seeks to offer a space for the discussion and acquisition of new knowledge, skills and competences in those computer technologies which play a central role in Humanities Computing and which determine every day more and more the work done in the Humanities and Cultural Sciences, as well as in Libraries and Archives everywhere.
The Summer School aims at integrating these activities into the broader context of the Digital Humanities, where questions about the consequences and implications of the application of computational methods and tools to cultural artefacts of all kinds are asked. The Summer School plans to show-case possible realisations of such questions via the presentation of concrete projects.
The Summer School will offer Humanities students in particular the possibility to gain practical knowledge of the application of computational methods to the digitalisation, description, analysis and production of humanities contents and artefacts (languages, texts, images, etc.), to discuss related theoretical questions and to forge new perspectives on the study and preservation of languages, cultures and cultural memory and the translation between cultures.
Computer and Engineering Sciences’ students, for their part, will be given the opportunity at the Summer School to acquire insights into the nature of humanities data, to get to know the areas in the Arts and Humanities in which computational methods are employed, to learn to recognise the difference of the Humanities approach to these methods and to confront themselves with the challenges that work with diffuse and extremely complex data presents for soft- and hardware solutions.
Source: @melissaterras
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