
Digital Humanities and History Research
Jul 16, 2019 | Chapters, Publications

Digital Humanities and History Research: the documentation centre and digital road map on the Marble Industry
- Daniel Alves
- Mármore. 2000 Anos de História. Volume II. A Evolução Industrial, os seus Agentes Económicos e a Aplicação na Época [Marble. 2000 Years of History. Volume II. Industrial Evolution, its Economic Agents and Application in the Contemporary Era] Contemporânea
- Ana Cardoso de Matos and Daniel Alves
- 2019
- Lisbon: Theya Editores
- Language: Portuguese
- ISBN: 978-989-99164-4-9
- 277-307 p.
The Digital Humanities are a transdisciplinary area of knowledge that connects research in Humanities to the critical use of digital methods and tools. The term was coined in 2004 and since then has become widely adopted internationally. Its dissemination is in part the result of an earlier process of consolidating the use of computing in the humanities that dates from the 1950s. A similar process occurred in Portugal and in particular in the field of History, since the 1970s. Taking advantage of these developments and their consolidation, the PHIM project, since its inception in 2013, has implemented a strategy of Digital Humanities in the survey, systematization, organization and dissemination of sources, bibliography and testimonies related to the Heritage and History of the Marble Industry. This was the strategy that allowed the creation of a documentation centre and a digital road map, as well as its dissemination on an online platform. The results of the two projects developed since then can now be accessed and used by the entire community, including academics, students, decision makers, industry agents or simply curious people interested in learning more about this relevant Alentejo industry.
About the book:
Os vários artigos incluídos nesta obra são consequência do trabalho de uma equipe transdisciplinar, que reuniu informação para estudo do Património e História da Indústria dos Mármores (PHIM), desenvolvido no âmbito de uma candidatura aprovada pelo programa Alentejo2020, que decorreu entre 2017 e 2019. Este será certamente um importante contributo para o conhecimento e valorização do património e da história do Alentejo, com relevo para a geografia do chamado anticlinal dos mármores, que envolve cinco concelhos.
Este estudo foi projectado para ser realizado em fases cronológicas e temáticas. A primeira fase do PHIM, concretizado entre 2012 e 2015, foi dedicada ao período cronológico de 1850 a 1986, de modo a apresentar as várias dinâmicas pelas quais foi passando esta indústria, bem como o espaço geográfico em que se foi desenvolvendo.
A segunda fase foi desenvolvida tendo em consideração os séculos I a IV e XVI a XX, com o contributo das seguintes áreas de especialização: arqueologia romana e arqueologia industrial; história da arte; história da construção; história das técnicas e tecnologias; cartografia; georreferenciação; levantamento fotográfico e humanidades digitais.
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Detalhes do Evento
Workshop seeking to encourage a comparative discussion on dissolution of several European empires, with a greater emphasis on those which unravelled in the aftermath of post-1945 European decolonization. Contested
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Detalhes do Evento
Workshop seeking to encourage a comparative discussion on dissolution of several European empires, with a greater emphasis on those which unravelled in the aftermath of post-1945 European decolonization.
Contested Imperial Endings
In the twentieth century, the dissolution of several European empires occurred in the context of armed conflicts, whether major conflagrations such as the First World War or the counterinsurgency wars in colonial spaces. Some of these imperial break-ups were sudden, happening after military defeats, such as the capitulation of the German and Habsburg empires in 1918, or as the culmination of protracted colonial wars which proved to be deeply divisive among the metropolitan publics, such as the Algerian war of independence or the decolonization wars in Portuguese-speaking Africa. The circumstances surrounding some of the major political decisions which involved capitulations or negotiated agreements with nationalist movements may have been quite different, but there were significant similarities as well. In all these cases, a sense of wounded pride or deep resentment surfaced in the discussions that followed the political settlements that allowed for the surrender of territory.
Accusations of ‘scuttle’, ‘abandonment’, ‘neglect’, ‘irresponsibility’, or even ‘treason’, came to the fore in several debates, poisoning political discussions for quite some time. The myth of the ‘stab in the back’, which emerged after the German and Austrian collapse of 1918, and was also present in several debates in European metropoles after 1945, influenced conspiracy theories that shaped debates in the following years, with echoes that reach the present day.
Based on an ongoing research project that assesses metropolitan reactions to the conduct of the Portuguese military in East Timor in 1975, a workshop under the auspices of the Institute of Contemporary History and the Portuguese Commission of Military History, will be held in Lisbon in September 2025, seeking to encourage a comparative discussion on some of these themes in various contexts, with a greater emphasis (but not exclusively) on those which unravelled in the aftermath of post-1945 European decolonization.
Call for papers
We welcome papers which may highlight:
- The language and images which permeated debates in several countries (United Kingdon, France, Belgium, the Netherlands).
- The role of public opinion and the media.
- The undertaking of inquiry commissions into aspects of decolonization/imperial retreat.
- Attempts to bring charges against individuals (politicians, military) in courts of law.
- The consequences experienced by those targeted by the accusations (i.e., in their political and professional careers, or even on a more violent level).
Please send your abstract (max. 300 words) until 30 May 12 June to projetodectil@gmail.com.
The organizing committee will reply until 15 June.
English will be the working language.
Presentations should be no longer than 20 minutes.
The expected outcome of the workshop is the submission of a dossier/special issue to an international peer-reviewed journal.
>> Download the Call for Papers (PDF) <<
Organisers:
Institute of Contemporary History, NOVA University Lisbon
Portuguese Commission of Military History
The event is part of the FCT research project DecTiL — Auditing Decolonization in Timor-Leste, 1974-82: the Riscado Report (doi.org/10.54499/2023.10636.25ABR)
Tempo
8 (Segunda-feira) 9:00 am - 9 (Terça-feira) 4:00 pm
Organizador
Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanities and the Portuguese Commission of Military History
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Fourth edition of the Amílcar Cabral Prize
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