Ruth Gardner's Blog 16/12/2012: Memories of Mother
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 16 December 2012 entitled, "Memories of Mother".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 16 December 2012 entitled, "Memories of Mother".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 24 April 2013 entitled, "Horological Happening".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 18 March 2014 entitled, "Function for Fortune".
The UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive contains tens of thousands of high value cultural heritage items related to a long series of earthquakes that hit Canterbury, New Zealand, from 2010 - 2012. The archive was built by a Digital Humanities team located at the center of the disaster in New Zealand's second largest city, Christchurch. The project quickly became complex, not only in its technical aspects but in its governance and general management. This talk will provide insight into the national and international management and governance frameworks used to successfully build and deliver the archive into operation. Issues that needed to be managed included human ethics, research ethics, stakeholder management, communications, risk management, curation and ingestion policy, copyright and content licensing, and project governance. The team drew heavily on industry-standard project management methods for the basic approach, but built their ecosystem and stakeholder trust on principles derived directly form the global digital humanities community.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 07 March 2014 entitled, "Imaginatively Inconvenient".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 06 February 2014 entitled, "Losing Luneys".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 4 April 2013 entitled, "Substantial Sunflowers".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 19 April 2013 entitled, "Reading Room".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 28 April 2013 entitled, "Painted People".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 12 March 2013 entitled, "Regular Routines".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 25 June 2014 entitled, "Ecclesiastical Enhancement".
Cultural heritage is a dynamic concept, incorporating the ideas and values of many different organisations and individuals; it is heavily dependent on the context of the item or site being conserved, and transforms something from an old article into a historically significant object. A formal definition of cultural heritage did not appear in the Antarctic Treaty System until 1995, however Antarctic heritage value has been applied to various sites and monuments since the inception of the Treaty, from Shackleton’s Nimrod Hut to a heavy tractor. This report examines a number of case studies to determine the various ways in which heritage items and sites can be managed – such as the removal of the South Pole Dome – as well as their conservation after natural disasters, for instance the Christchurch earthquakes.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 30 August 2012 entitled, "A plethora of pleasures".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 22 January 2012 entitled, "Heart and Home".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 25 February 2012 entitled, "Magic Museum Moments".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 30 April 2013 entitled, "Plants at Piko".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 21 September 2011 entitled, "Caring for the Convalescent".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 16 April 2011 entitled, "Pledging to Participate".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 4 July 2011 entitled, "Anticipating our artwork".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 24 May 2014 entitled, "Asking for Assistance".
An entry from Roz Johnson's blog for 7 February 2012 entitled, "It Makes Me Want to Sing".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 21 February 2013 entitled, "Conspicuous Canopy".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 12 March 2014 entitled, "Love on Liverpool".
An entry from Roz Johnson's blog for 23 February 2013 entitled, "Flower Cones".
In this paper Paul Millar outlines the development of the University of Canterbury Quakebox project, a collaborative venture between the UC CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive and the New Zealand Institute of Language Brain and Behaviour to preserve people’s earthquake stories for the purposes of research, teaching and commemoration. The project collected over 700 stories on high definition video, and Millar is now looking at using the corpus to underpin a longitudinal study of post-quake experience.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 11 September 2013 entitled, "Arcadian Art".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 19 May 2012 entitled, "Cordon Cutback".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 28 April 2012 entitled, "Peterborough Project".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 26 May 2011 entitled, "Christchurch Conversations".
An entry from Ruth Gardner's blog for 21 April 2011 entitled, "Guarding the Graves".