Buch, Englisch, 156 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 295 g
Postcolonial Mediations across Technology's Cultural Canon
Buch, Englisch, 156 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 295 g
ISBN: 978-0-367-50431-1
Verlag: Routledge
Building on the important history of digital humanities scholarship in South Asia and its diasporas that precedes this work, this book contends that South Asian studies is further positioned to offer a new genealogy of digital humanities, demonstrated through this assemblage of essays that reveal how the digital continues to shape notions of home, belonging, nation, identity, memory, and diaspora through a variety of humanistic methodologies and digital techniques.
South Asian Digital Humanities thus demonstrates that postcolonial digital humanities has great possibility for creating some of the most important social justice scholarship in South Asian studies of the past century. It offers these essays as innovative interventions that complicate the digital cultural record while lodging a 'homelanding' for South Asians within it, positioning digital humanities as a method through which South Asian studies can strategically participate in the ongoing struggle for representation within digital knowledge production.
This book was originally published as a special issue of South Asian Review.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Teildisziplinen der Pädagogik Sonderpädagogik, Heilpädagogik
- Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Teildisziplinen der Pädagogik Multikulturelle Pädagogik, Friedenserziehung
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Spezielle Soziologie Mediensoziologie
- Sozialwissenschaften Medien- und Kommunikationswissenschaften Medienwissenschaften
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Foreword: From Subaltern Studies to South Asian Digital Humanities
Radhika Gajjala
1. South Asian Digital Humanities Then and Now
Roopika Risam & Rahul K. Gairola
2. Digital Humanities on the Ground: Post-Access Politics and the Second Wave of Digital Humanities
Nishant Shah
3. Emulation as Mimicry: Reading the Salman Rushdie Digital Archive
Porter Olsen
4. Inside and Outside the Literary Marketplace: The Digital Products of Amitav Ghosh, Arundhati Roy, and Salman Rushdie
Tawnya Azar
5. Gender-Based Violence in Contemporary Digital Graphic Narratives From India
Jana Fedtke
6. Acoustic Traces of Poetry in South Asia
A. Sean Pue
7. Beyond the Archive Gap: The Kiplings and the Famines of British Colonial India
Amardeep Singh
8. Colonial Topographies of Internet Infrastructure: The Sedimented and Linked Networks of the Telegraph and Submarine Fiber Optic Internet
Dhanashree Thorat
Afterword: The Vision and the Work into the 21st Century
Sukanta Chaudhuri