Histoire numérique et l’historiographie

Revolutionary, Disruptive, or Just Repeating Itself? Tracing the History of Digital History #dhiha9

23 Octobre 2024 à 25 Octobre 2024

Revolutionary, Disruptive, or Just Repeating Itself? Tracing the History of Digital History #dhiha9
The C²DH is co-organiser of an international conference about the History of Digital History that will take place at the German Historical Institute 23-25 October 2024.

This conference aims to address the often-overlooked genealogies of digital history and the recurring issue of »blind spots« within the field regarding its own past. Many of the epistemological and methodological questions we face today were already explored by previous generations. These explorations were often accompanied by rhetoric emphasizing the new, revolutionary, and disruptive nature of digital history. Researchers still find it difficult to assess their own achievements from a historical perspective. Our conference seeks to bring together digital historians from diverse contexts and regions to shed light on the history of digital history. While certainly not exhaustive, the conference will focus on the importance of historicizing developments, methods, and practices in digital history, identifying existing research gaps, and highlighting past achievements.

Date: 23-25 October 2024

Place: German Historical Institute Paris/Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris (DHIP), 8, rue du Parc-Royal, 75003 Paris http://www.dhi-paris.fr

Organised by: Mareike König (DHIP), Julianne Nyhan (TU Darmstadt/University College London), Sébastien Poublanc (CNRS, FRAMESPA), Jane Winters (School of Advanced Study, University of London), Gerben Zaagsma (Centre for Contemporary and Digital History, University of Luxembourg).

With the financial support of: the C²DH, DHIP, NFDI4Memory, School of Advanced Study, University of London, TU Darmstadt.

Free entrance, please register under: https://t1p.de/uppfp 

Online participation available: https://t1p.de/i5i73

 

Programme

Wednesday, 23 October 2024

14.00 - 17.45 
 
Pre-Conference Workshops
 
14.00

 
Andrew Flinn (University College London)
An Oral History Approach to the History of Digital History – Critical Questions and Practices
 
  Pauline Spychala (DHIP)
How to Get Started with Handwritten Text Recognition – Using eScriptorium in Historical Research
 
16.00
 
Coffee break
 
16.15


 
Torsten Hiltmann (Humboldt University of Berlin), Mareike König (DHIP)
Integrating AI in Historical Sciences Education: Experience Exchange on Teaching (with) ChatGPT and Artificial Intelligence
 
18.00
 
Welcome and Introduction by the organisers
 
18.30











 
Keynote
Hannah Ishmael
(King’s College, London)
Resisting Borders: Archives as Technology from Analogue to Digital
Engaging the frameworks of ‘technology’ and ‘space’ this talk discusses the role of colonial administration and archives in creating and maintaining physical and intellectual borders. However, whilst the colonial archive marks the starting point of this talk, I will focus on how Black communities (with a focus on Britain) have contested and negotiated these borders already in the Analogue and continue to do so in the Digital.
Dr. Hannah Ishmael is Lecturer in Digital Culture and Race at Kings College London, and previously she was the Collections and Research Manager at Black Cultural Archives. Hannah’s PhD research focussed on the development of Black-led archives in London and her current research looks at the relationship between archives, borders and technologies.
 
20.00 Reception. Followed by dinner for conference participants at the IHA.

Thursday, 24 October 2024

09.00    
 
Panel 1: Perspectives on the History of Digital History
 
  Opening Roundtable: Stéphane Lamassé (Univ. Paris1 Panthéon-Sorbonne), Helle Strandgaard Jensen (Aarhus University), Jörg Hörnschemeyer (German Historical Institute Rome), Astrid Menz (Orient-Institut Istanbul), moderated by Julianne Nyhan (TU Darmstadt/University College London), and Jane Winters (School of Advanced Study, University of London)
 
  Gerben Zaagsma (Centre for Contemporary and Digital History, University of Luxembourg)
Facing the History Machine: Towards Histories of Digital History
 
10.30
 
Coffee break
 
11.00

 
Panel 2: Historicising Digital History: Geographic Views
Chair: Mareike König (DHIP)
 
  Sébastien Poublanc (CNRS, FRAMESPA)
“Tomorrow’s Historian Will Either Be a Programmer or He Won’t Be”: The Historiography of French Digital History
 
  Lik Hang Tsui (City University of Hong Kong)
Digital Humanities in Traditional Chinese Scholarship: Early Digitisation Efforts and Their Impacts on Digital History, 1980-2009
 
12.00
 
Lunch break
 
13.30

 
Continuation of Panel 2
Chair: Torsten Hiltmann (Humboldt University of Berlin)
 
  Judith Zimmermann (University of Salzburg)
On the Inside of German and Austrian Universities: Pioneering Pathways in Digital History Research and Teaching in the period 2000-2021
 
  Jörg Wettlaufer (Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Lower Saxony, Göttingen)
Digital History and Digital Humanities in the German Speaking Areas. Twenty Years of Cooperation und Segregation, 2004–2024
 
14.30

 
Panel 3: Digital Editions
Chair: Helle Strandgaard Jensen (Aarhus University)
 
  Kajsa Weber (Lund University)
From Edited Volumes to Digitised Documents: Historical Research and Reviews of Remediated Primary Sources, 1881–2023
 
  Alexander Isacsson (Lund University)
The Precursor of Mass Digitisation? Historical Source Editing and Media Transfer Prior to the Digital Age
 
15.30
 
Coffee break
 
16.00

 
Panel 4: Outreach and Teaching in Digital History
Chair: Jane Winters (School of Advanced Study, University of London)
 
  Sofia Papastamkou (Centre for Contemporary and Digital History, University of Luxembourg)
Teaching Historians “the ways of the machine”: Proto-debates, Actors, and Practices on Code Literacy in the Humanities, 1966-1987
 
  Katharina Hering (German Historical Institute Washington), Elizabeth Brown (Library of Congress, Washington D.C.)
Communicating the History of Digital History to the Public: What Can We Learn from American Memory?
 
17.00 Free evening

 

Friday, 25 October 2024

09.00    

 
Panel 5: Historicising Digital Methods
Chair: Pauline Spychala (DHIP)
 
  Katrin Moeller (Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg)
The Long Road to the Digital, Standardised Classification of Historical Professions: 1568 to 2024! A Contribution to the Methodological and Digital Development of Vocabularies
 
  Jascha Merijn Schmitz (Humboldt University of Berlin)
Are Simulations History? Reappraising an Old Digital History Method through the Context and History of its Usage and Discourse
 
  Werner Scheltjens (University of Bamberg)
The Maritime Dimension of Digital History
 
10.30
 
Coffee break
 
11.00

 
Continuation of Panel 5
Chair: Hélène Noizet (Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
 
  Edgar Lejeune (Université Paris Cité)
‘Open’ or ‘Close’ Research Instruments? Conflicting Rationales in the Organization of Early Digital Medieval History in Europe, 1960-1990
 
  Michael Piotrowski (Université de Lausanne)
Looking Back to Look Ahead: Bachelard’s Phenomenotechnique and Gardin’s Logicist Approach in Digital History
 
12.00


 
General Discussion
Chair: Vadim Popov (Max Weber Network Eastern Europe)
Mareike König (DHIP), Concluding Remarks
 
13.00 End of the conference and snack to round off

Programme Committee

  • Olivier le Deuff (Université Bordeaux Montaigne)
  • Torsten Hiltmann (Humboldt University of Berlin)
  • Mareike König (IHA Paris)
  • Stéphane Lamassé (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
  • Hélène Noizet (Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)
  • Julianne Nyhan (TU Darmstadt)
  • Alexandra Ortolja-Baird (University of Portsmouth)
  • Sébastien Poublanc (Université Toulouse)
  • Martin Schmitt (univ. Paderborn)
  • Pauline Spychala (IHA Paris)
  • Helle Strandgaard Jensen (Aarhus University)
  • Jane Winters (School of Advanced Study, University of London)
  • Gerben Zaagsma (Centre for Contemporary and Digital History, University of Luxembourg)