The politics of mass digitization / Nanna Bonde Thylstrup.
2019
Z701.3.D54 T49 2018eb
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Title
The politics of mass digitization / Nanna Bonde Thylstrup.
ISBN
026235005X (electronic bk.)
9780262350051 (electronic bk.)
9780262039017
026203901X
9780262350051 (electronic bk.)
9780262039017
026203901X
Published
Cambridge : MIT Press, [2019].
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (216 pages).
Call Number
Z701.3.D54 T49 2018eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
025.8/4
Summary
A new examination of mass digitization as an emerging sociopolitical and sociotechnical phenomenon that alters the politics of cultural memory. Today, all of us with internet connections can access millions of digitized cultural artifacts from the comfort of our desks. Institutions and individuals add thousands of new cultural works to the digital sphere every day, creating new central nexuses of knowledge. How does this affect us politically and culturally? In this book, Nanna Bonde Thylstrup approaches mass digitization as an emerging sociopolitical and sociotechnical phenomenon, offering a new understanding of a defining concept of our time. Arguing that digitization has become a global cultural political project, Thylstrup draws on case studies of different forms of mass digitization -- including Google Books, Europeana, and the shadow libraries Monoskop, lib.ru, and Ubuweb -- to suggest a different approach to the study of digital cultural memory archives. She constructs a new theoretical framework for understanding mass digitization that focuses on notions of assemblage, infrastructure, and infrapolitics. Mass digitization does not consist merely of neutral technical processes, Thylstrup argues, but of distinct subpolitical processes that give rise to new kinds of archives and new ways of interacting with the artifacts they contain . With this book, she offers important and timely guidance on how mass digitization alters the politics of cultural memory to impact our relationship with the past and with one another.
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OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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