Center for Urban History opens a call for applications to the
interdisciplinary workshop "Historicity of the Visuality and Image History: New Forms of Digital and Visual History/Humanities" to take place
on November 14-15, 2019, in Lviv.
Since the formulation of the "visual history" and announced
pictorial turn in humanities, pictures have enjoyed increased scrutiny. Often
different approaches to visual history followed an operationally mixed attitude
to studying the pictures of history (cultural history) and the historicity of
images (art history). Today visual history is combined out of diverse
disciplines, from history to art history, from communication and media studies
to social and political studies. However, the current turn to digitalization
poses new challenges for visual history – it can confront images as a medium,
to analyze the material dimension of traditional visuality (its mediality) and
immateriality of digital pictures. In addition, images, which are disseminated
through various media, cause informational overload, and require a new research
agenda. The workshop purpose is to analyze the relation between history,
visuality, and academia with special concerns of the digital turn. It demands
to combine the theoretical debates on digital history along with the
educational experience. The workshop may suggest new research directions in
visual history research, to familiarize the visualization research community
with the problems faced by historians, and to foster future collaboration
between fields such as vision (and visualization) and historical research.
We are interested in applications that can cover the following
questions: How do we make use of images in an insightful way, and what history
can learn from the new digital (visual) practices? Digital methods bring new
applications and ways of dissemination. What are the lessons drawn from the new
media? How do archives benefit from these applications? How institutions use digital
historic projects in educational programs?
- Visual Epistemology: Defining basic concepts in digital and visual history. What do we mean by the term historic (digital) image? What are the limits? How does image change under digital turn?
- Reading Images/Films: How do we train people and historians to read images? How do we avoid the trap of overstatement while analyzing images? How the image turns from illustration to a problem? What do (digital) images want and which questions they ask?
- VR and Games: How digital applications and online projects change our imagination about the past? What are the benefits and difficulties in this new digital imaginary?
- Storytelling: How do we manage to turn image collections into narratives? What is the role of an archive in the dissemination of pictures? What are the practices to turn the collection into a story?
Who is eligible to apply:
We invite researchers who work with images and foster to reveal unique
stories that lie within historic pictures. We are looking for researchers of
various professional backgrounds, such as historians, archivists, museum
curators, photography specialists, and other relevant researchers are strongly
encouraged to apply.
The application should include:
- Title and a brief description of your research/project (under 500 words)
- CV
Please, submit your applications to conferences@lvivcenter.org with the
subject "Digital History Seminar 2019".
Deadline for applications: August 23, 2019
Funding
The organizers will cover travel to and accommodation in Lviv.
Digital History Seminars of the Center for Urban History explores
methodological, ethical and theoretical aspects of generation, collection and
analysis of digital or digitalized photographs and video recordings as
testimony on the past and the worlds in which people used to live or are still
living. In addition, the seminars also touch upon the issue of awareness
capacity of historical visual data used for comprehensive presentations and
lectures for different audiences. The goal of the seminars is to have a
discussion on available possibilities and challenges of digital history among
researchers.
Seminars consist of three major blocks:
- Artifacts (photographs, files, films, etc.)
- Technologies (camera, antenna, screen, print, software, etc.)
- Visual and digital methods (sense and analysis)
The event is implemented as part of "Digital History Seminars"
of the Center for Urban History of East and Central Europe as supported by the
University of St. Gallen (Switzerland).
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