Events
- Word and Image: Early Modern Treasures from the UCL Collections
- Centre for Early Modern Exchanges: Launch Conference
- Cultures of Surveillance - Conference
- Inspector Sangiorgi and the Sicilian mafia, 1875-1877
- Inaugural Lecture - Chronis Tzedakis
- Inaugural Lecture - Gesine Manuwald
- Inaugural Lecture - Imran Rasul
- Inaugural Lecture - Jennifer Robinson
- Inaugural Lecture - Frederic J. Schwartz
- Inaugural Lecture - Albert Weale
- Inaugural Lecture - Claire Warwick
- Inaugural Lecture - Ada Rapoport-Albert
- Inaugural Lecture - Helen Hackett
- Inaugural Lecture - Philippe Marlière
- Inaugural Lecture - Miriam Leonard
- Time-travels in literature and politics
- Displacing Persephone: Epic between Worlds
- Making Space
- Art by Animals comes to London
- Generation X Reflects: British – German Encounters
Inaugural Lecture - Claire Warwick
11 November 2011
24 January 2012
The monologue in a crowdsourced world: Have digital resources rendered the inaugural lecture obsolete?
Digital resources and social media have changed fundamentally the way that we create, share and disseminate information. Digital Humanities (DH) is a collaborative interdiscipline where most research is done in teams. Yet the traditional inaugural lecture emphases the work of an individual: it cannot celebrate the contribution of research groups, users, and the wider DH community, to scholarship. I shall therefore question whether the inaugural lecture remains meaningful in a crowdsourced, DH world and compare its affordances with those of digital resources which allow users, both within and beyond academia, to contribute to and engage with the scholarly process.
Professor Claire Warwick is Head of UCL Department of Information
Studies, Director of UCL Centre for Digital Humanities; and Vice-Dean:
Research for the Faculty of Arts and Humanities. Her research is on the
use of digital resources in the humanities and cultural heritage; social
media; and reading behaviour in physical and digital spaces. She has
led and co-investigated numerous DH research projects, including LAIRAH,
UCIS, QRator, VERA, LinkSphere and INKE.
The lecture was followed on Twitter: #UCLDH
Read about it on Claire Warwick's personal blog -
http://clairewarwick.blogspot.com/2012/01/inaugural-lecture.html
It was also streamed live at www.ucl.ac.uk/live and is now available on SoundCloud.
