Event Title

Possible Digital Worlds, One Material World: EcoDH

Location

PSY-228B

Start Date

3-11-2017 12:15 PM

End Date

3-11-2017 12:15 PM

Description

We in digital humanities and media studies like to use environmental metaphors. We talk of "media ecologies" and hold conferences about "possible worlds." Maxwell, Raundalen, and Vestberg have suggested that such metaphors of the environment obscure the relationship of digital media to the material world, enabling utopian discussions about virtual environments at the precise moment in which the real environment is in crisis. The emerging field of Ecocritical DH (EcoDH) seeks to maintain a focus on the material world within the digital humanities. Located at the nexus of environmental humanities and digital humanities, EcoDH mobilizes a range of tools and critical constructs, using digital methods to investigate environmental issues while reflecting on the ecological implications of those same digital methods. EcoDH thus offers new horizons for digital work while challenging digital humanities to investigate its own practices and metaphors.

This roundtable will feature scholars and practitioners from various institutions and backgrounds discussing the existing place of, and future possibilities for, EcoDH at their respective institutions as well as transinstitutionally. Ted Dawson will present the InfraVU project at Vanderbilt University, which creates immersive experiences of campus infrastructure normally hidden from view. Amanda Starling Gould will touch upon the "dirty digital humanities," sustainable digital practice through permaculture, and the urgency of cross-disciplinary EcoDH. Craig Dietrich will discuss his work combining permaculture with network culture by creating software that drives non-hierarchical systems such as Scalar and ThoughtMesh. Max Symuleski will explore the political ecology of maintenance as it relates to digital objects, digital infrastructures, and life-cycles of computational hardware. libi will address media archaeological and techno-revitalization practices in relation to obsolescence and convenience culture.

To demonstrate EcoDH at its best, our presentation will be a hybrid intervention that puts into practice our theoretical intentions. Max, libi, and Amanda will be presenting live from the PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge at Duke University while Ted and Craig will present in person in Orlando.

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Nov 3rd, 12:15 PM Nov 3rd, 12:15 PM

Possible Digital Worlds, One Material World: EcoDH

PSY-228B

We in digital humanities and media studies like to use environmental metaphors. We talk of "media ecologies" and hold conferences about "possible worlds." Maxwell, Raundalen, and Vestberg have suggested that such metaphors of the environment obscure the relationship of digital media to the material world, enabling utopian discussions about virtual environments at the precise moment in which the real environment is in crisis.