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E-raamat: Collecting in the Twenty-First Century: From Museums to the Web

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  • Formaat: 242 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-May-2022
  • Kirjastus: Camden House Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800103382
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 25,99 €*
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"Seminal to the rise of human cultures, the practice of collecting is an expression of individual and societal self-understanding. Through collections, cultures learn and grow. The introduction of digital technology has accelerated this process and at the same time changed how, what, and why we collect. Ever-expanding storage capacities and the accumulation of unprecedented amounts of data are part of a highly complex information economy in which collecting has become even more important for the formation of the past, present, and future. Museums, libraries, and archives have adapted to the requirements of a digital environment, as has anyone who browses the internet and stores information on hard drives or cloud servers. In turn, companies follow the digital footprint we leave behind. Today, collecting includes not only physical objects but also the binary code that allows for their virtual representation on screen. Collecting in the Twenty-First Century identifies the impact of technology, both new andold, on the cultural practice of collecting as well as the challenges and opportunities of collecting in the digital era. Scholars from German Studies, Media Studies, Museum Studies, Sound Studies, Information Technology, and Art History as well as librarians and preservationists offer insights into the most recent developments in collecting practices"--

An interdisciplinary volume of essays identifying the impact of technology on the age-old cultural practice of collecting as well as the opportunities and pitfalls of collecting in the digital era.

Seminal to the rise of human cultures, the practice of collecting is an expression of individual and societal self-understanding. Through collections, cultures learn and grow. The introduction of digital technology has accelerated this process and at the same time changed how, what, and why we collect. Ever-expanding storage capacities and the accumulation of unprecedented amounts of data are part of a highly complex information economy in which collecting has become even more important for the formation of the past, present, and future. Museums, libraries, and archives have adapted to the requirements of a digital environment, as has anyone who browses the internet and stores information on hard drives or cloud servers. In turn, companies follow the digital footprint we leave behind. Today, collecting includes not only physical objects but also the binary code that allows for their virtual representation on screen. Collecting in the Twenty-First Century identifies the impact of technology, both new and old, on the cultural practice of collecting as well as the challenges and opportunities of collecting in the digital era. Scholars from German Studies, Media Studies, Museum Studies, Sound Studies, Information Technology, and Art History as well as librarians and preservationists offer insights into the most recent developments in collecting practices.

Arvustused

[ T]he theoretical underpinnings, issues raised, and points made throughout the volume are useful beyond their immediate applications. They pose questions of access, data collection, ethics, and economics that will interest scholars of the history of collections, museum studies, digital humanities, library and information sciences, and related fields of literary theory and criticism and media studies. -- J. Decker * CHOICE *

Introduction: Collecting in the Digital Age 1(37)
Christoph Zeller
1 Collecting: Denning the Subject
38(19)
Johannes Endres
Part I Spaces of Collecting
2 Collector as Curator: Collecting in the Post-Internet Age
57(10)
Boris Groys
3 Should Libraries Still Be Charged with Collecting in a Digital Environment?
67(12)
Michael Knoche
4 Museums and Collecting as/and Media in the Digital Age
79(16)
Peter M. Mclsaac
Part II Recollection
5 Quality Storage: Collecting as a Technique of Reading
95(11)
Nikolaus Wejjmanu
6 Phenomenology of Memory in an Age of Big Data
106(14)
Clifford B. Anderson
7 Collecting the Cultural Memory of Palmyra
120(12)
Erin L. Thompson
8 Conservation in the Digital Age
132(21)
Jessica Walthew
Part III Virtuality
9 Music and the Limits of Collectibility
153(12)
Rolf J. Goebel
10 Cat Art and Climate Change: Collecting in the Data Anthropocene
165(16)
Edward Dawson
Part IV Economics
11 Doomed to Collect: Dataveillance as Inner Logic of the Internet
181(19)
Roberto Simanowski
12 Data Collection in the Age of Surveillance Capitalism
200(21)
Douglas C. Schmidt
Notes on the Contributors 221(4)
Index 225
JOHANNES ENDRES is Professor of Comparative Literature and Art History at the University of California, Riverside. CHRISTOPH ZELLER is Professor and Chair of the Department of German, Russian and East European Studies at Vanderbilt University. ROLF J. GOEBEL is Distinguished Professor of German, Emeritus, at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.