The Typewriter Under the Bed: Introducing Digital Humanities through Banned Books and Endangered Knowledge

Alexandra Bolintineanu, Jaya Thirugnanasampanthan
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In 2017, I taught an Introduction to Digital Humanities course for undergraduate students at the University of Toronto. The course’s unifying theme was banned books. What moved me to focus the course in this way was the illegal typewriter that lived under my childhood bed: I grew up in formerly communist Eastern Europe, where typewriters were tightly controlled by the government. Yet my family owned an illegal, unregistered typewriter, hidden under my bed behind the off-season clothes, because they saw the ability to write and disseminate one’s thoughts as a technology of survival.In the Intro to DH course, students explored the intellectual landscape of the digital humanities by thinking about banned books throughout history. They examined early printed books of astronomy; early printed books of the lives of saints; illicitly typewritten and photographed Soviet samizdat; endangered climate change research data rescued by the Internet Archive; and American Library Association data about banned and challenged books for children and young adults. This article reflects on using the lens of banned books and endangered knowledge to focus an Introduction to DH course and encourage students to interrogate critically how a variety of technologies—from codex to printing press to typewriter to the internet—create, transmit, preserve, and repress knowledge and cultural memory.
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床下的打字机:通过禁书和濒危知识介绍数字人文
2017年,我在多伦多大学为本科生讲授数字人文导论课程。这门课的统一主题是禁书。让我以这种方式关注这门课程的是我童年时床下的那台非法打字机:我在前共产主义的东欧长大,那里的打字机受到政府的严格控制。然而,我的家人拥有一台非法的、未注册的打字机,藏在我的床底下,藏在淡季衣服后面,因为他们认为,写作和传播思想的能力是一种生存的技术。在“DH入门”课程中,学生通过思考历史上的禁书,探索了数字人文学科的知识版图。他们研究了早期印刷的天文学书籍;早期印刷的圣徒生平书籍;非法打印和拍摄的苏联地下刊物;互联网档案馆抢救的濒危气候变化研究数据;以及美国图书馆协会关于儿童和青少年禁书和挑战书籍的数据。本文以禁书和濒危知识为视角,聚焦《高等教育导论》课程,鼓励学生批判性地思考各种技术——从手抄本到印刷机,从打字机到互联网——是如何创造、传播、保存和压制知识和文化记忆的。
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