A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies

Since c. 2008 many special collections libraries have allowed researchers to take photographs of medieval manuscripts: this article calls such self-service photography ‘DIY digitization’. The article considers some possible effects of this digital tool for research on book history, especially on pal...

Ամբողջական նկարագրություն

Մատենագիտական մանրամասներ
Հիմնական հեղինակ: Wakelin, D
Ձևաչափ: Journal article
Լեզու:English
Հրապարակվել է: De Gruyter 2021
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author Wakelin, D
author_facet Wakelin, D
author_sort Wakelin, D
collection OXFORD
description Since c. 2008 many special collections libraries have allowed researchers to take photographs of medieval manuscripts: this article calls such self-service photography ‘DIY digitization’. The article considers some possible effects of this digital tool for research on book history, especially on palaeography, comparing it in particular to the effects of institutionally-led digitization. ‘DIY digitization’ does assist with access to manuscripts, but less easily and with less open data than institutional digitization does. Instead, it allows the researcher’s intellectual agenda to guide the selection of what to photograph. The photographic process thereby becomes part of the process of analysis. Photography by the researcher is therefore limited by subjectivity but it also helps to highlight the role of subjective perspectives in scholarship. It can also balance a breadth or depth of perspective in ways different from institutional digitization. It could in theory foster increased textual scholarship but in practice has fostered attention to the materiality of the text.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7a27ae7b-e965-4da7-b41c-a8e20bbd58422022-03-26T20:42:03ZA new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studiesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7a27ae7b-e965-4da7-b41c-a8e20bbd5842EnglishSymplectic ElementsDe Gruyter2021Wakelin, DSince c. 2008 many special collections libraries have allowed researchers to take photographs of medieval manuscripts: this article calls such self-service photography ‘DIY digitization’. The article considers some possible effects of this digital tool for research on book history, especially on palaeography, comparing it in particular to the effects of institutionally-led digitization. ‘DIY digitization’ does assist with access to manuscripts, but less easily and with less open data than institutional digitization does. Instead, it allows the researcher’s intellectual agenda to guide the selection of what to photograph. The photographic process thereby becomes part of the process of analysis. Photography by the researcher is therefore limited by subjectivity but it also helps to highlight the role of subjective perspectives in scholarship. It can also balance a breadth or depth of perspective in ways different from institutional digitization. It could in theory foster increased textual scholarship but in practice has fostered attention to the materiality of the text.
spellingShingle Wakelin, D
A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title_full A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title_fullStr A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title_full_unstemmed A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title_short A new age of photography: ‘DIY digitization’ in manuscript studies
title_sort new age of photography diy digitization in manuscript studies
work_keys_str_mv AT wakelind anewageofphotographydiydigitizationinmanuscriptstudies
AT wakelind newageofphotographydiydigitizationinmanuscriptstudies