Identities – a historical look at online memory and identity issues
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Sophie Gebeil
Abstract
Since the 1990s, profound changes linked to the globalization of both economic activities and information, as well as increased individual mobility have given rise to questions about national identities. This has occurred to such an extent that national “identity crises” have emerged, which collectively have become an important political issue. The Internet has become an active tool in these debates, contributing to increasing the circulation of knowledge, while at the same time disseminating new interpretations of past events on which the construction of collective and individual identities is based. Thus, since the 1990s, online content related to the past has become a newly documented subject matter for a cultural history of memory based on web sources with regard to identity creation. In this article, the web will be perceived as an object of study, used to analyze what relationship the past has to the construction of identities. By considering the web and its archives as a deposit for born-digital sources for the history of the 1990s to the present day, this chapter proposes to present some historiographical research fields concerning identity creation. We will thus examine to what extent the web and its archives constitute the sources that can open up avenues of research concerning the history of identity creation.
Abstract
Since the 1990s, profound changes linked to the globalization of both economic activities and information, as well as increased individual mobility have given rise to questions about national identities. This has occurred to such an extent that national “identity crises” have emerged, which collectively have become an important political issue. The Internet has become an active tool in these debates, contributing to increasing the circulation of knowledge, while at the same time disseminating new interpretations of past events on which the construction of collective and individual identities is based. Thus, since the 1990s, online content related to the past has become a newly documented subject matter for a cultural history of memory based on web sources with regard to identity creation. In this article, the web will be perceived as an object of study, used to analyze what relationship the past has to the construction of identities. By considering the web and its archives as a deposit for born-digital sources for the history of the 1990s to the present day, this chapter proposes to present some historiographical research fields concerning identity creation. We will thus examine to what extent the web and its archives constitute the sources that can open up avenues of research concerning the history of identity creation.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Historiography
- The Historiographical Foundations of Digital Public History 17
- Crowdsourcing and User Generated Content: The Raison d’Être of Digital Public History 35
- Sharing Authority in Online Collaborative Public History Practices 49
- Shifting the Balance of Power: Oral History and Public History in the Digital Era 61
- Digital Public Archaeology 77
- Identities – a historical look at online memory and identity issues 87
- Digital Environmental Humanities 97
- Combining Values of Museums and Digital Culture in Digital Public History 107
- Open Access: an opportunity to redesign scholarly communication in history 121
- Past and Present in Digital Public History 131
- Digital Hermeneutics: The Reflexive Turn in Digital Public History? 139
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Part 2: Contexts
- Archivists as Peers in Digital Public History 149
- History Museums: Enhancing Audience Engagement through Digital Technologies 165
- Interactive Museum & Exhibitions in Digital Public History Projects and Practices: An Overview and the Unusual Case of M9 Museum 175
- Digital Public History in Libraries 185
- Publishing Public History in the Digital Age 199
- “Learning Public History by doing Public History” 211
- Spaces: What’s at Stake in Their Digital Public Histories? 223
- Digital Public History in the United States 235
- Technology and Historic Preservation: Documentation and Storytelling 243
- Social Media: Snapshots in Public History 259
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Part 3: Best Practices
- Curation: Toward a New Ethic of Digital Public History 277
- Data Visualization for History 291
- Mapping and Maps in Digital and Public History 301
- Gaming and Digital Public History 309
- Individuals in the Crowd: Privacy, Online Participatory Curation, and the Public Historian as Private Citizen 317
- Building Communities, Reconciling Histories: Can We Make a More Honest History? 327
- Cybermemorials: Remembrance and Places of Memory in the Digital Age 337
- Living History: Performing the Past 349
- Activist Digital Public History 359
- Digital Public History: Family History and Genealogy 369
- Digital Personal Memories: The Archiving of the Self and Public History 377
- Planning with the Public: How to Co-develop Digital Public History Projects? 385
- As Seen through Smartphones: An Evolution of Historic Information Embedment 395
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Part 4: Technology, Media, Data and Metadata
- What does it Meme? Public History in the Internet Memes Era 405
- Historical GIS 419
- Content Management 431
- Linked Open Data & Metadata 439
- Big Data and Public History 447
- Modeling Data Complexity in Public History and Cultural Heritage 459
- History and Video Games 475
- Historians as Digital Storytellers: The Digital Shift in Narrative Practices for Public Historians 485
- The Audiovisual Dimension & the Digital Turn in Public History Practices 495
- Digital Public History and Photography 505
- Exploring Large-Scale Digital Archives – Opportunities and Limits to Use Unsupervised Machine Learning for the Extraction of Semantics 517
- Infographics and Public History 531
- List of Contributors 545
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Historiography
- The Historiographical Foundations of Digital Public History 17
- Crowdsourcing and User Generated Content: The Raison d’Être of Digital Public History 35
- Sharing Authority in Online Collaborative Public History Practices 49
- Shifting the Balance of Power: Oral History and Public History in the Digital Era 61
- Digital Public Archaeology 77
- Identities – a historical look at online memory and identity issues 87
- Digital Environmental Humanities 97
- Combining Values of Museums and Digital Culture in Digital Public History 107
- Open Access: an opportunity to redesign scholarly communication in history 121
- Past and Present in Digital Public History 131
- Digital Hermeneutics: The Reflexive Turn in Digital Public History? 139
-
Part 2: Contexts
- Archivists as Peers in Digital Public History 149
- History Museums: Enhancing Audience Engagement through Digital Technologies 165
- Interactive Museum & Exhibitions in Digital Public History Projects and Practices: An Overview and the Unusual Case of M9 Museum 175
- Digital Public History in Libraries 185
- Publishing Public History in the Digital Age 199
- “Learning Public History by doing Public History” 211
- Spaces: What’s at Stake in Their Digital Public Histories? 223
- Digital Public History in the United States 235
- Technology and Historic Preservation: Documentation and Storytelling 243
- Social Media: Snapshots in Public History 259
-
Part 3: Best Practices
- Curation: Toward a New Ethic of Digital Public History 277
- Data Visualization for History 291
- Mapping and Maps in Digital and Public History 301
- Gaming and Digital Public History 309
- Individuals in the Crowd: Privacy, Online Participatory Curation, and the Public Historian as Private Citizen 317
- Building Communities, Reconciling Histories: Can We Make a More Honest History? 327
- Cybermemorials: Remembrance and Places of Memory in the Digital Age 337
- Living History: Performing the Past 349
- Activist Digital Public History 359
- Digital Public History: Family History and Genealogy 369
- Digital Personal Memories: The Archiving of the Self and Public History 377
- Planning with the Public: How to Co-develop Digital Public History Projects? 385
- As Seen through Smartphones: An Evolution of Historic Information Embedment 395
-
Part 4: Technology, Media, Data and Metadata
- What does it Meme? Public History in the Internet Memes Era 405
- Historical GIS 419
- Content Management 431
- Linked Open Data & Metadata 439
- Big Data and Public History 447
- Modeling Data Complexity in Public History and Cultural Heritage 459
- History and Video Games 475
- Historians as Digital Storytellers: The Digital Shift in Narrative Practices for Public Historians 485
- The Audiovisual Dimension & the Digital Turn in Public History Practices 495
- Digital Public History and Photography 505
- Exploring Large-Scale Digital Archives – Opportunities and Limits to Use Unsupervised Machine Learning for the Extraction of Semantics 517
- Infographics and Public History 531
- List of Contributors 545