logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Making and interpreting: digital humanities as embodied action

Humanities

Making and interpreting: digital humanities as embodied action

Z. Zhang, W. Song, et al.

This study by Zhiqing Zhang, Wanyi Song, and Peng Liu delves into how Digital Humanities intersect with the sociological body, proposing that our understanding of knowledge is not just intellectual but embodied and haptic. A future of Digital Humanities characterized by bodily inclusivity and the emergence of 'digitized' knowledge is on the horizon.... show more
Abstract
Digital technology has created new spaces, new realities and new ways of life, which have changed the way people perceive and recognise the world. In particular, the production, dissemination and reception methods of literature and art have been impacted upon significantly. Acknowledging humanities scholars have been engaged in conducting research while theorising and debating what Digital Humanities (DH) is/is not in the past two decades, this study extends current thought on DH by connecting it with the concept of sociological body, particularly thinking bodily interaction in relation to digital technologies in DH practice. The increasingly deepening integration of body and technology allows DH practice to become an event, in which embodied bodily action is situated in the (digital) environment that impacts on knowledge production. Acknowledging contemporary discourse regarding the two waves of DH, the article pays attention to the presence of the body whereby DH practice is bodily inclusive as mediated by digital technology, in which bodily interaction in producing knowledge via technologies reflects haptic experience and cultural constraints upon the sociological body. At the same time, technologies are not an innocent medium but an active contributor, so much so that we claim knowledge produced with the substantial involvement of digital technology is 'digitised' knowledge, as our critical interpretation towards a possible DH 3.0 practice that is subject to the core value of the humanities.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jan 02, 2024
Authors
Zhiqing Zhang, Wanyi Song, Peng Liu
Tags
Digital Humanities
sociological body
embodied action
haptic experience
digitized knowledge
technology
bodily inclusivity
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny