Open Library of Humanities

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The Open Library of Humanities. Building a sustainable, open access future for the humanities. Part of BirkbeckUoL & makers of @janeway!
“Cultural Heritage at Conisbrough Castle: Expanding Resident Narratives, Public Education, and Aspects of Medieval Domestic Life for a Diverse Audience” by Emily Michelle Tuttle: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.10303 Published today as part of the #OLHjournal "The Public Curatorship of the Medieval Past" Special Collection
Cultural Heritage at Conisbrough Castle: Expanding Resident Narratives, Public Education, and Aspects of Medieval Domestic Life for a Diverse Audience

<p>English Heritage Trust (EH) prides itself on communicating the histories of its sites through playful forms of engagement. In the recent scholarship of EH heritage managers David Sheldon (2011), Joe Savage, and William Wyeth (2020), new forms of creating play and providing site histories are considered alongside the challenges of updating signage and activities to meet visitor expectations. Expanding castle narratives beyond the Norman origins, increasing representations of women and lesser-known historic figures, and addressing the domestic function of castles are a priority for Sheldon, Wyeth, and Savage as they create case-by-case programs for their many properties. This paper considers what pedagogical methodologies are utilized at EH’s Conisbrough Castle, the selected story for presentation and why, and what display methods can be expanded to add to the visitor understanding of Conisbrough’s longer story through the Middle Ages. Using a mix of display boards, video, and text-based signage, managers at Conisbrough recall the de Warenne family narrative and recognize the Conisbrough keep’s domestic function. This is a successful recollection of this one resident’s story, however, only featuring this narrative limits Consibrough’s history to the Norman period. As EH seeks to grow their castle histories, I propose creating new engagements through the current display media that emphasize the importance of multiple tenant stories across time in castle spaces. Increased opportunities to relate to the past and retain information through play will assist visitors as they come to recognize the home as witness to both domestic activity and those events that occurred on the world stage.</p>

Open Library of Humanities
Our Autumn Newsletter is OUT! Don't miss our latest updates > New silver super-supporter, results OLH library board, winners of the OLH #OpenAccess Award 2023, Zombie Poster blog post, new staff members and more: https://mailchi.mp/openlibhums/newsletter-16925226 #DiamondOA
Read our collection of articles published as part of the #OLHJournal "Freedom After Neoliberalism" Special Collection, guest edited by Alexander Beaumont and Adam Kelly: https://olh.openlibhums.org/collections/429/ #fromthearchives
Open Library of Humanities | Collection:

Read our collection of articles published as part of the #OLHJournal "Cultural Representations of Machine Vision" special collection, guest-edited by Jill Walker Rettberg, Gabriele de Seta, Marianne Gunderson and Linda Kronman: https://olh.openlibhums.org/collections/877/
Open Library of Humanities | Collection:

Congratulations to the winners of the OLH #OpenAccess 2023 Award: the University College Cork for the organisation of the hybrid event ‘Data papers’, Grassroots' new open access platform of the Journal of Political Ecology and the #diamondOA journal Post45 for their article prize competitions: https://www.openlibhums.org/news/658/

We are delighted to be able to fund these three initiatives to further promote the benefits and impact open access in the humanities for all, and look forward to seeing how these projects progress over the coming year. 🏆 👏

Winners of the OLH Open Access 2023 Award announced

Winners of the OLH Open Access 2023 Award announcedEarlier this year, the Open Library of Humanities announced the OLH Open Access Award 2023, a fund dedicated to promoting the benefits and impact of open access to humanities scholars and disciplines and to knowledge worldwide. Our OLH Open Access awards have been awarded to three organisations and individuals in recognition for their invaluable [...]

Open Library of Humanities

Check out the new special issue of Orbit: A Journal of American Literature dedicated to the work Percival Everett. It includes articles on Frenzy, Telephone, The Trees, American Desert, Walk Me to the Distance, Wounded, Erasure and more.

Read it here: https://orbit.openlibhums.org/issue/900/info/

Orbit: A Journal of American Literature | Issue: Issue: 1(11) Percival Everett (2023)

"Dative possessor in Romance: a formal feature account with special reference to Portuguese" by Inês Duarte, Rita Gonçalves and Feliciano Chimbutane, out now in the Journal of Portuguese Linguistics: https://doi.org/10.16995/jpl.9873
Dative possessor variation in Romance: a formal feature account with special reference to Portuguese

<span lang="EN-US" style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">In this paper we address possessor dative structures (PDSs) in European Portuguese (EP) and in the Mozambican variety of Portuguese spoken in Maputo, which is mainly in contact with the Bantu language Changana. Focusing primarily on data from EP, we argue that PDSs show microvariation across Romance. We account for this microvariation by extending to Romance languages the distinction between nuclear and non-nuclear external possession structures originally proposed for Bantu languages, and propose that the value of the formal nominal feature [<i style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">i</i>part] is the source of the observed variation. We argue that the derivation of PDSs in EP involves movement of the possessor from the specifier position of a small clause for formal feature valuation, which accounts for the common properties of <i style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">give</i>-type verbs and possessor dative structures, as well as for the incompatibility of both constructions. We further adopt a corpus-based approach and an exploratory elicitation task for the discussion of possessor datives in urban MozP. The findings support the role of the formal feature [<i style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif;mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri;mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">i</i>part] in the acceptability of sentences which do not converge with EP, arguably as a consequence of contact with Changana, but also show that Mozambican Portuguese exhibits convergence with the VP structure of EP.</span>

Journal of Portuguese Linguistics

New #openaccess issue of 19! ‘Nineteenth-Century Infrastructures’, a fav new issue guest-edited by Joanna Hofer-Robinson and Nicola Kirkby that brings C19th projects into dialogue with critical infrastructure studies

Read it here: https://19.bbk.ac.uk/issue/915/info/

19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century | Issue: Issue: 35(2023) Nineteenth-Century Infrastructures (2023)

“The Lives Have It: Curating the Medieval Past at English Heritage Castles” by William Wyeth: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.10355 Published today as part of the #OLHjournal "The Public Curatorship of the Medieval Past" Special Collection
The Lives Have It: Curating the Medieval Past at English Heritage Castles

<p>This paper outlines some of the challenges to the public curation of the medieval past at castles, as experienced in the author’s curatorial capacity at English Heritage. Echoing the work of recent scholarship on the heritage presentation of castles, this paper contends that the breadth of narratives explored on such sites has been limited to a national, male-dominated legacy. This paper outlines key stakeholders in the public curation of castles, as well as the media at the disposal of English Heritage curators, before presenting an approach which centres the historical narrative around people. It argues that, by placing people, past and present, at the centre of the public curation of medieval castles, obstacles and limitations from previous approaches can be overcome. This paper concludes with a critical reflection, outlining some ways in which these challenges have been overcome using this approach at a recent project at Warkworth Castle (Northumberland). The article emphasises the capacity of traditional curatorship interplayed with creative endeavours, to bypass obstacles to telling a compelling but also challenging public history of medieval castles.</p>

Open Library of Humanities
“Machinic Visibility in Platform Discourses: Ubiquitous Interfaces for Precarious Users” by Nuno Atalaia and Rianne Riemens: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.10106 Published today as part of the #OLHjournal "Cultural Representations of Machine Vision" Special Collection
Machinic Visibility in Platform Discourses: Ubiquitous Interfaces for Precarious Users

Ubiquitous interfaces are becoming a key element in the promotional materials of tech companies. These new interfaces, normally associated with AR and VR systems, promise a future of frictionless technological interaction, allowing users to access any information and service from anywhere. Both factual and fictional, these systems are shown to enrich their users’ lives through machinic modes of vision and visualisation. In this paper, we frame promotional materials as elements in the discourses of Big Tech corporations that serve a strategic role in the expansion of their digital platforms. We analyse the symbolic role played by ubiquitous interfaces in the promotion of three digital platform services: Amazon’s Alexa Together, Microsoft’s Azure and Meta’s Metaverse. We claim that narratives of sensorial enrichment and empowerment—allowing people to not only see more, but better—are key in normalising the presence of platform interfaces in users’ lives. However, these narratives also advance what we call a regime of machinic visibility: a dependency of human vision on data processes and their visualisation. The imagined user of these services is a precarious one, unable to function or ‘see’ properly without a platform’s digital infrastructure. This precarity then justifies a relationship of dependence: the companies frame their products not just as enhancements, but as vital components of everyday life, implying that life itself is untenable without the intervention of platform companies. At the same time, Big Tech eschews criticism of its own role in undermining the social infrastructures and networks on which people depend.

Open Library of Humanities