Kate Gordon
From DigitalRhetoricCollaborative
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
- | Curation in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rhetoric digital rhetoric] is a means of compiling information and creating value out of digital information and media to better communicate and engage an audience. <ref>http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/ukoln/staff/m.pennock/publications/docs/lib-arch_curation.pdf</ref> Curation is the way in which a digital archive is filtered and used to present ideas and stimulate questions. The context this curation falls into is that of digital | + | Curation in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rhetoric digital rhetoric] is a means of compiling information and creating value out of digital information and media to better communicate and engage an audience. <ref>http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/ukoln/staff/m.pennock/publications/docs/lib-arch_curation.pdf</ref> Curation is the way in which a digital archive is filtered and used to present ideas and stimulate questions. The context this curation falls into is that of digital (relating to, using, or storing data or information in the form of digital signals combined) with rhetoric (language designed to have a persuasive or impressive effect on its audience). This curation creates opportunity to access vast archives and participate in picking out the appropriate data to combine with other material in order to build some sort of argument. <ref>http://www.ncte.org/library/NCTEFiles/Resources/Journals/CE/0762-nov2013/CE0762Seizing.pdf</ref> |
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+ | "Cathy Davidson explains that the first wave of humanities computing brought with it the onset of digital curation—a process that made archival materials widely available on the Web and “transformed how we do research and who can do it” (709). (Enoch and Gold) | ||
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+ | Digital Curation for the purpose of digital rhetoric involves the organization of information that is able to contribute value to an author's effective argument. The digital age has brought about new opportunities for curating by way of new media and vast archives. As the field of digital rhetoric emerges, curation has been brought under yet another light. | ||
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Revision as of 12:40, 21 April 2015
Contents |
Curation (Digital Rhetoric)
Overview
Curation in digital rhetoric is a means of compiling information and creating value out of digital information and media to better communicate and engage an audience. [1] Curation is the way in which a digital archive is filtered and used to present ideas and stimulate questions. The context this curation falls into is that of digital (relating to, using, or storing data or information in the form of digital signals combined) with rhetoric (language designed to have a persuasive or impressive effect on its audience). This curation creates opportunity to access vast archives and participate in picking out the appropriate data to combine with other material in order to build some sort of argument. [2]
"Cathy Davidson explains that the first wave of humanities computing brought with it the onset of digital curation—a process that made archival materials widely available on the Web and “transformed how we do research and who can do it” (709). (Enoch and Gold)
Digital Curation for the purpose of digital rhetoric involves the organization of information that is able to contribute value to an author's effective argument. The digital age has brought about new opportunities for curating by way of new media and vast archives. As the field of digital rhetoric emerges, curation has been brought under yet another light.
Definition
Curate 1. Select, organize, and look after the items in (a collection or exhibition) 2. Select, organize, and present (online content, merchandise, information, etc.), typically using professional or expert knowledge
Mediums
Challenge
Todd Presner explains, although these new data-mining technologies may “threaten to overwhelm traditional approaches to knowledge,” they do “[allow] us to ask questions that weren’t previously possible.[3]
Examples & Abilities
Digital Curation for the purpose of rhetoric can span an immense range of archives; historical, scientific, literary, artistic to name a few. Listed below are a sample array of curated archives in digital:
References
Resources