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The Zen of Pad.ma: 10 Lessons Learned from Running Open Access Online Video Archives in India and beyond
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Jan 28, 2016
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last modified
Jan 28, 2016 08:25 AM
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filed under:
Practice,
Digital Humanities,
Digital Media,
Open Access,
Researchers at Work,
Event,
Archives
Sebastian Lütgert and Jan Gerber, the co-initiators of, and the artists/programmers behind the pad.ma (Public Access Digital Media Archive) project will deliver a lecture at CIS on Wednesday, February 03, 6 pm, on their experiences of learnings from running open access online video archives in Germany, India, and Turkey. Please join us for coffee and vada at 5:30 pm.
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RAW
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P.P. Sneha - Mapping Digital Humanities in India
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by
Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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published
Dec 30, 2016
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last modified
Dec 31, 2016 05:56 AM
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filed under:
Higher Education,
Digital Knowledge,
CIS Papers,
Digital Humanities,
Education Technology,
Mapping Digital Humanities in India,
Digitisation,
Digital Scholarship,
RAW Research,
Researchers at Work
It gives us great pleasure to publish the second title of the CIS Papers series. This report by P.P. Sneha comes out of an extended research project supported by the Kusuma Trust. The study undertook a detailed mapping of digital practices in arts and humanities scholarship, both emerging and established, in India. Beginning with an understanding of Digital Humanities as a 'found term' in the Indian context, the study explores the discussion and debate about the changes in humanities practice, scholarship and pedagogy that have come about with the digital turn. Further it inquires about the spaces and roles of digital technologies in the humanities, and by extension in the arts, media, and creative practice today; transformations in the objects and methods of study and practice in these spaces; and the shifts in the imagination of the ‘digital’ itself, and its linkages with humanities practices.
Located in
Papers
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January 2015 Bulletin
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Jan 16, 2015
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last modified
Feb 26, 2015 05:02 PM
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filed under:
Access to Knowledge,
Wikipedia,
Accessibility,
Internet Governance,
Digital Humanities,
NVDA,
Openness,
Researchers at Work
Our newsletter for the month of January can be accessed below.
Located in
About Us
/
Newsletters
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June 2013 Bulletin
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Jun 30, 2013
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last modified
Jul 27, 2013 09:48 AM
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filed under:
Access to Knowledge,
Digital Natives,
Telecom,
Accessibility,
Internet Governance,
Digital Humanities,
Openness,
Researchers at Work
Our newsletter for the month of June 2013 can be accessed below.
Located in
About Us
/
Newsletters
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Habits of Living Thinkathon — Day 2 Live Blog: Deepak Menon on Water in India
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by
Jadine Lannon
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published
Sep 27, 2012
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last modified
Oct 09, 2012 05:14 AM
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filed under:
Live Blog,
Thinkathon,
Habits of Living,
Digital Humanities,
Workshop
The Habits of Living Thinkathon (Thinking Marathon) is being hosted by the Centre for Internet and Society in Bengaluru, India, from September 26 to 29, 2012. The event brings together a range of multidisciplinary scholars and practitioners. The workshop aims to generate a dialogue on the notion of surrogate structures that have become visible landmarks of contemporary life, and produce new conceptual frameworks to help us understand networks and the ways in which they inform our everyday practice and thought.
Located in
RAW
/
…
/
Blogs
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Habits of Living
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Habits of Living Thinkathon — Day 2 Live Blog: On Technology and Affective Indian Feminism(s)
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by
Alok Vaid-Menon
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published
Sep 27, 2012
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last modified
Oct 09, 2012 09:39 AM
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filed under:
Live Blog,
Thinkathon,
Habits of Living,
Digital Humanities,
Workshop
The Habits of Living Thinkathon (Thinking Marathon) is being hosted by the Centre for Internet and Society in Bengaluru, India, from September 26 to 29, 2012. The event brings together a range of multidisciplinary scholars and practitioners. The workshop aims to generate a dialogue on the notion of surrogate structures that have become visible landmarks of contemporary life, and produce new conceptual frameworks to help us understand networks and the ways in which they inform our everyday practice and thought.
Located in
RAW
/
…
/
Blogs
/
Habits of Living
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Habits of Living Thinkathon — Day 4 Live Blog: Finding and Funding the Masses
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by
Alok Vaid-Menon
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published
Sep 30, 2012
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last modified
Oct 09, 2012 06:55 AM
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filed under:
Live Blog,
Thinkathon,
Habits of Living,
Digital Humanities,
Workshop
The Habits of Living Thinkathon (Thinking Marathon) is being hosted by the Centre for Internet and Society in Bangalore, India, from September 26 to 29, 2012. The event brings together a range of multi-disciplinary scholars and practitioners. The aim of the workshop is to generate a dialogue on the notion of surrogate structures that have become visible landmarks of contemporary life, and to produce new conceptual frameworks to help us understand networks and the ways in which they inform our everyday practice and thought.
Located in
RAW
/
…
/
Blogs
/
Habits of Living
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Digital Humanities in India- Mapping Changes at the Intersection of Youth, Technology and Higher Education
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by
Sneha PP
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published
Feb 21, 2014
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last modified
Mar 05, 2014 12:21 PM
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filed under:
Digital Humanities
As part of the collaborative exercise on mapping the field of Digital Humanities in India, a series of short-term research projects were commissioned by HEIRA-CSCS, Bangalore in November 2013. A day-long workshop was organized at CIS on January 28, 2014 to discuss the learning from these projects and explore questions for further engagement with the field.
Located in
RAW
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Digital Humanities
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Questions to Nishant Shah
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by
Prasad Krishna
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published
Feb 25, 2014
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last modified
Mar 06, 2014 08:54 AM
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filed under:
Digital Humanities
Dr. Nishant Shah had a text interview with the Hybrid Publishing Lab around questions on Digital Humanities.
Located in
News & Media
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Digital Humanities: The Ecto-Parasite
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by
Anirudh Sridhar
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published
Mar 12, 2014
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last modified
Mar 12, 2014 01:04 PM
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filed under:
Digital Humanities
This blog entry, exploring Jacques Derrida's Mochlos can be read in three ways. The numbers below refer to the cells which should be read in the specified order.
A.) 1-3-4: This essay views knowledge and the University as a technology and asks whether the Digital Humanities under this framework is unnecessary and elitist. We analyze the elitism through Kants attempts to distinguish the University's duties of truth and action and then find out why Derrida thinks this distinction is impossible to make because of the nature language.
B.) 1-2-4: This essay starts off the same way but goes into the devouring margins of the University, whether its possible to safeguard against intrusion if the University is viewed as a language act and flips the question to see if the University is a parasite on the outside world and uses the Digital Humanities in this negotiation of power. It goes further to see if this parasitism is inevitable where there is language.
C.) 2-4: This is a subset of the previous essay but stands alone as a commentary on a different kind of effect of capitalism on the University from the one explored in the previous blog.
Located in
RAW