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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Greengrass , Lorna Hughes , Professor Marilyn Deegan , Professor Lorna HughesPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Weight: 0.680kg ISBN: 9780754672883ISBN 10: 0754672883 Pages: 276 Publication Date: 28 November 2008 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'In an age when the objects of scholarly analysis in the arts and humanities are rapidly moving from the physical world to the virtual realm, researchers from all disciplines need a better understanding of the possibilities and potential of computational theory and methods. The fascinating essays in 'The Virtual Representation of the Past' explore the cutting edge of new techniques enabled by the digital age - from data- and text-mining to search to spatial technology - while remaining firmly rooted in the humanistic tradition. The book is approachable and thought-provoking.' Daniel Cohen, George Mason University, USA 'This excellent volume, by established and younger scholars, offers a definitive overview of the current landscape from a multidisciplinary perspective. The transformative opportunities that technology has to offer humanities researchers are highlighted, together with the scale of the challenges in an age of where so little thought is given to interoperability and long-term issues such as sustainability.' Jane Ohlmeyer, Trinity College, Ireland '...plenty of food for thought for readers wishing to utilise technologies to analyse and represent meta-data visually...a valuable model worthy of emulation across other countries and professions.' Australian Academic & Research Libraries '...more than just a fascinating read about how historians and archaeologists are beginning to use digital technologies. It asks subtle questions about what happens to the past when it is represented digitally, about how digital technology can be used to reveal the layers of interpretation which have accumulated around surviving traces of past activity, and at the same time how it adds new layers of meaning which somehow must also be recognized and revealed...Librarians and archivists might well compare their own practices and values with those described here and think about the ways in which they are also creating virtual representations of the past.' The Electronic Library 'The book is a comprehensive academic and technical contribution to this specialist subject area by a distinguished team of leading experts. I am sure it will be invaluable to students, researchers and practitioners - it will certainly be a valuable addition to our library' Program Vol 43, No 4, 2010 Virtual Representation of the Past succeds well in its aim to critically evaluate the virtual representation of the past through digital media... recommended to the scholarly community interested in using the latest ICTs and methods to represent the past. This would include scholars from the humanities such as historians and archaeologists, as well as scholars from informatics and computer science.' Online Information Review, Vol 34, no 2, 2010 '...excellent work that will be of great interest not only to historians and archaeologists, but to anyone teaching and researching in the area of digital humanities. ...This is a volume that so many humanities disciplines will find useful and should find its way into the canon of digital humanities teaching.' Internet Archaeology Issue 26, 2010 'This collection may be a work by specialists for specialists, but it gives notice that the humanities, like books themselves, are finding new ways to talk.' Times Literary Supplement, August 2010 'All in all the discussed volume offers a valuable insight into the current possibilities and problems of digital historical science. It is a must-read for anyone doing research in this field of study and a useful book for anyone else just interested in this way of doing research.' Digital Medievalist 'In an age when the objects of scholarly analysis in the arts and humanities are rapidly moving from the physical world to the virtual realm, researchers from all disciplines need a better understanding of the possibilities and potential of computational theory and methods. The fascinating essays in 'The Virtual Representation of the Past' explore the cutting edge of new techniques enabled by the digital age - from data- and text-mining to search to spatial technology - while remaining firmly rooted in the humanistic tradition. The book is approachable and thought-provoking.' Daniel Cohen, George Mason University, USA 'This excellent volume, by established and younger scholars, offers a definitive overview of the current landscape from a multidisciplinary perspective. The transformative opportunities that technology has to offer humanities researchers are highlighted, together with the scale of the challenges in an age of where so little thought is given to interoperability and long-term issues such as sustainability.' Jane Ohlmeyer, Trinity College, Ireland '...plenty of food for thought for readers wishing to utilise technologies to analyse and represent meta-data visually....a valuable model worthy of emulation across other countries and professions.' Australian Academic & Research Libraries '...more than just a fascinating read about how historians and archaeologists are beginning to use digital technologies. It asks subtle questions about what happens to the past when it is represented digitally, about how digital technology can be used to reveal the layers of interpretation which have accumulated around surviving traces of past activity, and at the same time how it adds new layers of meaning which somehow must also be recognized and revealed...Librarians and archivists might well compare their own practices and values with those described here and think about the ways in which they are also creating virtual representations of the past.' The Electroni Author InformationMark Greengrass is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Sheffield, UK and Lorna Hughes is Professor of Digital Humanities, School of Advanced Study, University of London, UK Mark Greengrass, Andrew Prescott, Meg Twycross, Donald Spaeth, Fabio Ciravegna, Tim Hitchcock, Sam Chapman, Jamie McLaughlin, Ravish Bhagdev, Caroline Bowden, Julian D. Richards, Catherine Hardman, Manfred Thaller, Vincent Gaffney, Ian Gregory, Paul Cripps, David Arnold, Richard Beacham, Anna Bentkowska-Kafel, Lorna Hughes. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |