Histoire numérique et l’historiographie

Unframing Infrastructure: The Story of Research Infrastructure in and through the Humanities

6 Mars 2019

Unframing Infrastructure: The Story of Research Infrastructure in and through the Humanities

Photo taken at Humanities Tech KTH workshop on critical and constructive engagement with socio-technological systems organised by Patrik Svensson.

© Francesca Albrezzi

Lecture by Patrik Svensson, Professor of Humanities and Information Technology at Umeå University. The event is part of the C²DH lecture series 'New Horizons: Confronting the Digital Turn in the Humanities'.

Since the mid-1990s we have seen the emergence of ‘research infrastructure’ as a framework, which is now an important factor in allocating resources, controlling academic work and imagining futures. These futures are often technocentric, ‘heavy’, standardized and driven by data. They are also about transformation and breakthroughs. In a recent Australian infrastructure roadmap, research infrastructure is described as the “leaps that remake the world”.

In this talk, Svensson will trace the emergence of research infrastructure and consider its properties and mechanics. He is particularly interested in how the humanities – partly through the digital humanities – have negotiated the infrastructure turn, and how research infrastructure in the humanities, as outlined in policy documents and reports, often becomes a refuge from practices and perspectives that would seem central to humanistic work. Svensson argues that infrastructure is not a fixed concept and that we need to make sure that infrastructure, inside and outside the academy, is based on humanistic and human values.

Svensson’s work is practice based and he will use concrete examples (e.g. labs, technology, institutions, events and policy work).

 

About Patrik Svensson

Patrik Svensson (http://patriksv.com) is Visiting Professor of Digital Humanities at UCLA (2016-2019), Professor of Humanities and Information Technology at Umeå University, and former Director of HUMlab at Umeå University (2000-2014). Starting 2019 he is also Visiting Professor of Digital Humanities at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm.

Publications include “Contemporary and Future Spaces for Media Studies and Digital Humanities” (in The Routledge Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities, 2018), Big Digital Humanities. Imagining a Meeting Place for the Humanities and the Digital (University of Michigan Press. 2016), “The Why and How of Middleware” (with Johanna Drucker. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 2016) and “‘One Damn Slide After Another’: PowerPoint at every Occasion for Speech” (with Erica Robles-Anderson. Computational Culture. 2016).

 

This event is part of "New Horizons: Confronting the Digital Turn in the Humanities", a lecture series organised by the Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C²DH).

 

 

Wednesday, 6 March 2019

16.00 - 19.00 (including drinks reception)

Maison des Sciences humaines - Black Box
Belval Campus
11, Porte des Sciences
L-4366 Esch-sur-Alzette

 

Free entrance, registration is appreciated for organisational reasons.

With the kind support of

 

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