International
Conference on Digital Humanities:
“The
Democratisation of History”
18 May,
2019 – London, UK
Organised
by: London Centre for Interdisciplinary Research
"History
is written by the victors" according to a popular quote. Regardless of the
accuracy of this statement, the fact is that history is commonly written by
people with authority and bias, thus impeding any attempt to distill one
single, objective, definitive truth and record it in immutable books. Moreover,
history telling, and analysis inevitably comes with different facets, based on
context and the historian's background. Nevertheless, perspective cannot be
regarded as a mere thorn for the discipline, but instead can provide invaluable
material to enrich, retrospect and constructively investigate past events, so
long as proper mechanisms are in place to guarantee the mitigation of deceitful
behaviors.
Recently
there has been a rise of distributed systems as a viable means to democratise
various aspects of our society. Blockchain has gained attention as the main technology
behind Bitcoin and Ethereum, creating their own currency and promising simpler
transactions that will replace the status quo financial systems. However,
Blockchain potential is not limited to crypto-currencies and creating money out
of thin air in an attempt to become rich overnight. Blockchain is the
technology that may significantly benefit our lives in the near future by
decentralizing governance, allowing peers to directly interact in a reliable
and secure manner and empowering communities with the privilege and
responsibility of defining their operation and evolution.
Adopting
Blockchain technologies appeals as a very promising direction towards the
democratisation of History. As the name implies, Blockchain is a chain of
blocks, each registered at some point in time, which is in line with History's
linearity in terms of timeliness of events. What is written in each block, is a
product of interactions among peers of the blockchain, who can all have access
to the system, in a deterministic manner based on agreed predefined processes.
How can History writing be mapped into a conversational process with the
conclusions, as well as the reviews, discussions and links to facts, being
printed on blocks of the Blockchain? How can access of all users to History
reading and writing benefit the panoramicity and cultural inclusiveness into
preserving our heritage? To which extent can a single reference system foster
historical knowledge and awareness, while unleashing freedom of speech in event
reporting and shedding light into the patterns of historical events?
We invite
proposals from various disciplines including history, political sciences,
philosophy, sociology, anthropology, IT, media and communication, literature,
linguistics, etc.
Paper
proposals up to 250 words and a brief biographical note should be sent by 1
February 2019 to: digital.humanities@lcir.co.uk. Please download Paper ProposalForm.
Registration
fee – 100 GBP
Provisional
conference venue: Birkbeck, University of London, 43 Gordon Square, London,
WC1H 0PD
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