5.1. Response: Living a Semi-digital Kinda Life
| dc.creator | Kersel, Morag M. | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2024-12-06T19:20:59Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2024-12-06T19:20:59Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2016-10-20 | |
| dc.description.abstract | The following observations draw on my personal experience as an archaeologist working in the Eastern Mediterranean who has dabbled in the digital world. In considering the papers in this volume, I reflect on what it means to “live a digital life” in field archaeology. I argue we are living a “semi-digital kinda life” (à la Third Eye Blind, the US rock band formed in the early 1990s) where many of us are part paper and part digital, which I contend is not a bad state of affairs. In assessing our half in/half out digital archaeology, I speculate that new technologies have the tendency to create, or reinforce, divisions between genders, developed and less-developed nations, and practice and theory. These thought-provoking chapters illustrate the very bright future for digital archaeological fieldwork and data collection, but there is still work to be done – to improve, expand, and include missing elements into digital archaeology. | |
| dc.identifier.citation | <p>Kersel, Morag M. “Response: Living a Semi-digital Kinda Life.” In <em>Mobilizing the Past for a Digital Future: The Potential of Digital Archaeology</em>, edited by Erin Walcek Averett, Jody Michael Gordon, and Derek B. Counts, 475-492. Grand Forks, ND: The Digital Press at the University of North Dakota, 2016.</p> | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/84414 | |
| dc.relation.replaces | https://dc.uwm.edu/arthist_mobilizingthepast/20 | |
| dc.subject | Digital archaeology | |
| dc.subject | ethics | |
| dc.subject | public archaeology | |
| dc.subject | technological fetishism | |
| dc.title | 5.1. Response: Living a Semi-digital Kinda Life | |
| dc.type | article |