Geographic Information Systems/Science gives users a way to think spatially and solve many kinds of problems. GIS is used in many different fields, in the private and public sector, in universities, government agencies and non-profits. Please join us in this session as we make connections within the Central Florida GIS community, and talk about what comes next. Participants include Al Hill, GIS manager for Volusia County, and John Walker, anthropologist from UCF.
]]>Our session proposes to talk about current updates to the Charles Brockden Brown Electronic Archive and Scholarly Edition platform (XTF) and user interface, including refinements in our primary and secondary bibliography metadata. Questions are invited about our choice of platform, archive selection process, use of TEI, use of Library of Congress Subject Headings, and other processes relative archive interface design and usability.
In 2014, we published “The Charles Brockden Brown Archive: Mapping Archival Access and Metadata” in Archive Journal.
We look forward to discussing digital archives and editions that are in progress–or being planned!
]]>Our THATCamp workshop is about “The Citizen Curator,” which is the project of a Visual Texts &Technology seminar at the University of Central Florida led by Professor Barry Mauer.
The course focuses on citizen curating, which offers opportunities to non-professional curators who are interested in the art of creating exhibits from archived materials. We will curate both on-site and digital/online exhibitions. The course has three purposes:
Our exhibits will be made from archival materials in African American Legacy: The Carol Mundy Collection: 1720-2010, which is held by the University of Central Florida library. This collection contains thousands of items relating to African American history including books, manuscripts, sheet music, pamphlets, journals, newspapers, broadsides, posters, photographs and ephemera, which all speak to the black experience. Included is an array of racist ephemera including derogatory postcards, advertisements, product packaging, magazine and newspaper illustrations and other related materials. Carol Mundy, herself African-American and a non-academic, participates in training students to work with this fascinating and difficult material.
The seminar involves collaboration with the John C. Hitt Library, UCF’s Public History Center, the Regional Center for Collecting the History, Experiences, and Stories of Central Florida (RICHES), and other partnering entities. Students enrolled in the seminar have the option to work as interns in the John C. Hitt Library, the Public History Center, and the RICHES program. During their internships, students will develop their skills in archiving, preservation, digitizing, tagging, and curating, and will create curated exhibits, both in public spaces and online.
Curators need to make informed decisions about their work and to be aware of their choices. To this end, we are learning the ideas and works of exemplary curators, such as Lucy Lippard, Walter Hopps, Henri Langlois, Pontus Hultén, Harald Szeeman, Jean-François Lyotard, and others. We will also present the works of theorists and writers, such as Walter Benjamin, Jorge Luis Borges, Georges Bataille, Michel Leiris, André Breton, and Gregory Ulmer, whose ideas enrich our understanding of curating with new media. From these curators and theorists, students are developing their own curating practices.
The Citizen Curator project identifies three major types of curated exhibits: Educational, Rhetorical, and Experimental. In our projects, we practice primarily Rhetorical and Experimental modes, though we study Educational modes as well.
The seminar addresses several problems related to curating:
Deliverables
In addition to producing a proposal for the exhibits, students will also curate their own exhibits and create a Guidebook for Citizen Curators, aimed at bringing non-professionals into the practice of curating. Here are the major topics for the guidebook:
This booklet, once compiled and edited, will be available free of charge to attendees at our public presentations, as well as through the Center for Public History. In addition, it will be available online as a downloadable file.
We are hoping to use our time at THAT Camp to brainstorm ideas for our exhibits, our guidebook, for digital tools and platforms, and for ways of engaging the community effectively.
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