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档案和历史

Archives and History
课程网址: http://videolectures.net/mitworld_walsh_foley_gitelman_prelinger_...  
主讲教师: Peter Walsh, John Miles Foley, Lisa Gitelman, Rick Prelinger, Ann Wolpert
开课单位: 麻省理工学院
开课时间: 2011-01-17
课程语种: 英语
中文简介:
“死树技术”的学者们在一种极度消费创新的文化中感到越来越不安。尽管我们可能“生活在一种永久变化的状态”,但大卫·索伯恩希望“我们不会让乌托邦人和未来主义者恐吓我们。”主持人彼得·沃尔什向这个小组的档案工作者和历史学家提出了一系列问题,他们反映了这一点。数千年来不断改变其学科的数字时代的焦虑和兴奋。经过一千年的历史和许多书面文学的灭绝,约翰迈尔斯福利将口头传统(OT)视为“在高度文化的社会中活得很好,甚至在有线西方和多功能:它为社会做了比文学更多的事情。“它通过其”变形支持变形社会的能力“而存活下来,例如在解散种族隔离的南非。 OT和IT(互联网技术)非常相似:既有表演者,也有参与紧急活动,参与分布式作者。事实上,OT可以在互联网上找到强有力的表达,新的期刊和多媒体电子伴侣鼓励更广泛的受众和互动用户进行表演和活动。从物理档案到数字档案的转换“将改变历史知识,”Lisa Gitelman说,因为它意味着管理这些档案的系统发生了变化。 Gitelman说,每当你打开一个Gmail帐户时,都要求你不要删除:“新媒体总是引起新的档案敏感性。”但是,她警告说,新兴的档案系统“几乎完全取决于物体的字母数字特征和描述它们的元数据。“通过档案搜索的历史学家就像一个矿工,其头盔灯只能照亮狭窄的区域.Rick Prelinger将档案视为”文化紧急。 ......他们正在零售。“一旦主要由专家用于制作书籍,电视节目和展品,档案现在吸引普通用户进行家庭项目。仅与档案类似的YouTube对24/7档案访问产生了不切实际的期望。但如果档案拒绝用户,“支持我们并保持档案开放的社会文化共识可能会失败。”Prelinger看到了改变档案感知的可能性“作为文件进入模塑者和死亡的地方。”档案可能是“一个点离开......为历史干预,“产生”将历史主流化并重新锚定在公共领域的机会。“”数字环境中的管理责任至关重要,“Ann Wolpert说道,他相信”鞋子在鞋盒中存活的可能性“在阁楼里,她们还很小。“她还指出了机构档案和唱片之间出现的”巨大差距......以及那些正常人类活动副产品的档案。“她展示了麻省理工学院1935年戏剧俱乐部演出的照片,有一天,“迷惘的少女”将成为总统的妻子。这是“偶然的档案,在某个时间点创造了生活的味道,丰富和质感。”随着我们记录越来越多的“媒体如此短暂以至于我们面临着严重的风险”,人们会为后代留下什么样的剪贴簿项目失去......这些经历“?
课程简介: Scholars of “dead tree technologies” feel increasingly uneasy in a culture overwhelmingly consumed with innovation. Although we may “live in a condition of perpetual flux,” David Thorburn hopes that “we won’t allow utopians and futurists to intimidate us.” Moderator Peter Walsh poses a series of questions to the archivists and historians on this panel, who reflect the anxiety and exhilaration of a digital age that is constantly transforming their disciplines. After a thousand years and the extinction of many written literatures, John Miles Foley views the oral tradition (OT) as “alive and well in highly literate societies, even in the wired West, and multifunctional: it does many more things for societies than literature is able to do.” It has survived through its “ability to morph in support of morphing societies,” such as in South Africa as it dissolved apartheid. And OT and IT (Internet technology) are quite alike: both performer driven, involved in emergent activities, partaking in distributed authorship. Indeed, OT may find robust expression on the Internet, with new journals and multimedia e-companions encouraging wider audiences and interactive users for performances and events. A switch from physical to digital archives “will change historical knowledge,” Lisa Gitelman says, because it means a change in the systems governing those archives. Whenever you open a Gmail account, says Gitelman, you’re urged not to delete: “new media have always prompted new archival sensibilities.” But, she warns, the emerging archive system “depends almost wholly on the alphanumeric character of objects and the metadata that describe them.” A historian searching through archives is like a miner whose helmet light can only illuminate narrowly defined areas. Rick Prelinger views archives as “culturally emergent. …They’re going retail.” Once used mainly by specialists to produce books, TV shows, and exhibits, archives now attract ordinary users with home-based projects. YouTube -- which only resembles an archive -- has created unrealistic expectations of 24/7 archival access. But if archives rebuff users, “the social-cultural consensus that supports us and keeps archives open may fail.” Prelinger sees possibilities for changing the perception of archives “as the place where documents go to molder and die.” Archives could be “a point of departure … for historical intervention,” generating “opportunities for mainstreaming history and re-anchoring in the public sphere.” “Stewardship responsibility in a digital environment is essential,” says Ann Wolpert, who believes “the odds that bits will survive in a shoebox in the attic are pretty small.” She also points to a “yawning gap emerging between institutional archives and records … and those archives (that are) a byproduct of normal human activities.” She shows an MIT photo of a 1935 drama club performance, where the “winsome damsel” would one day become the president’s wife. It’s the “incidental archives that create the flavor, richness and texture of life at a point in time.” What scrapbook items will people hold onto for future generations, as we record more and more “in media so ephemeral that we run the serious risk of losing …these experiences”?
关 键 词: 创新文化; 档案; 历史
课程来源: 视频讲座网
最后编审: 2019-06-20:yuh
阅读次数: 44