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- title: post-modern late-capitalism or late-capitalist post-modernism?
- url: https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/#mw19
- hash_url: 13d7a83861f503c01493dcd8c8d459cb
-
- <div style="font-style:italic;">
- <p>These are the slides and notes for a talk I gave at the
- 2019 <a href="https://mw19.mwconf.org">Museums and the Web</a> conference, in
- Boston. The talk accompanied a paper I wrote for the
- conference titled <a href="https://mw19.mwconf.org/paper/mapping-space-time-and-the-collection-at-sfo-museum/">Mapping
- Space, Time, and the Collection at SFO Museum</a> which
- documents the work we've been doing on the <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/">Mills
- Field</a> website at <a href="https://sfomuseum.org/">SFO Museum</a>.</p>
-
- <p>Although the talk focuses on the work we're doing at
- SFO it is the continuation of some broader themes I've been
- actively banging on for a while. If you'd like to read more
- then I would point you to the <a href="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2014/09/11/brand/#dconstruct">still
- life with emotional contagion</a> and <a href="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2014/10/06/interpretation/#brick">this
- is my brick / there are many like it but this one is mine</a>
- talks, both from 2014, the <a href="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2015/03/16/mention/#breaking-up">history
- is time breaking up with itself</a> talk from 2015 and the <a href="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2017/02/20/mostly/#museumnext">fault
- lines — a cultural heritage of misaligned expectations</a> talk from 2017.</p>
-
- <p>In 2019, this is what I said.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-001">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-001">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.001.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>Hi, my name is Aaron.</p>
-
- <p>I am the Head of Internet Typing at the <a href="https://sfomuseum.org/">San Francisco
- International Airport Museum</a>. As silly as a title like that may
- sound (and I actually have an even more vague and opaque
- official title for HR purposes) it is the best way to describe
- my role at the museum.</p>
-
- <p>In the past I have been part of the teams at <a href="https://www.flickr.com/">Flickr</a>, <a href="https://www.stamen.com/">Stamen</a>
- Design and <a href="https://www.mapzen.com/">Mapzen</a> where the common thread has been maps and
- location. I was also part of the <a href="https://labs.cooperhewitt.org/">Digital and Emerging Media</a> team
- at the <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/">Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum</a> helping to
- re-open the museum and <a href="https://mw2015.museumsandtheweb.com/paper/strategies-against-architecture-interactive-media-and-transformative-technology-at-cooper-hewitt/">launch the Pen</a> in 2014.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-002">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-002">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.002.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>The <a href="https://www.flysfo.com/">San Francisco International Airport</a>, or SFO, first opened
- in 1927 on the site of the old <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2018/08/08/why/">Mills Field</a> in San Mateo
- County. Although SFO is physically situated in San Mateo it is owned
- and operated by the <a href="https://sfgov.org/">City and County of San Francisco</a>. Like the
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farallon_Islands">Farallon Islands</a>, 30 miles off the Pacific Coast, SFO is
- actually part of San Francisco proper but unlike the Farallons
- is <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2019/01/14/gates/images/sf-centroids.png">never shown that way on a map</a>.</p>
-
- <p>SFO is the 20th busiest airport in the world and 7th busiest
- in the United States. Last year, approximately 58 million
- passengers flew in and out of the airport.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-003">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-003">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.003.jpeg"/>
- </a>
-
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1376812931/">Reflections in Wood - Surfboards and Shapers</a> (2019)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Since 1980 the airport has had a museum. First accredited in
- 1999 the museum currently has 37 full-time and up to 24
- part-time staff.</p>
-
- <p>This is a photograph of the "<a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1376812931/">Reflections in Wood - Surfboards
- and Shapers</a>" exhibition currently on display in the
- International Terminal. Everything you see in this photo – from
- the curatorial programming, to registration and conservation,
- handling, exhibition design, fabrication and installation as
- well as the graphic design and photography – all of this was
- done in-house.</p>
-
- <p>This is the work of my peers and they do this <em>30 to 40 times</em>
- a year, 80 if you include the recently inaugurated <a href="https://www.flysfo.com/museum/programs/video-arts-history">video arts
- program</a>. I just sit in the corner pecking away at a keyboard
- connected to the internet.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-004">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-004">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.004.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>In addition to the almost <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/years/">1,400 exhibitions</a> the museum has
- produced since 1980 it has a <a href="https://www.flysfo.com/museum/aviation-museum-library/collection">permanent collection of 130,000
- objects</a> related to the history of the airport and commercial
- aviation. We also maintain a <a href="https://www.flysfo.com/museum/aviation-museum-library/research-services">library and an archive</a> of materials
- related to the aviation collection.</p>
-
- <p>At any given moment there are <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/on-display/">upwards of 1,000 objects on
- display</a> in the terminals.</p>
-
- <p>On top of all of that we are charged with the care of the <a href="https://www.flysfo.com/museum/public-art/public-collection">one
- hundred plus public artworks purchased by the San Francisco Arts
- Commission</a> and installed on the airport property.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-005">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-005">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.005.jpeg"/>
- </a>
-
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1226607773/">Bowling: A Unique American Art Form</a> (1991)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>You might be wondering: How did all of this happen?</p>
-
- <p>The answer is basically that in the 1970s the airport
- commissioners decided SFO should be a <q>nice place</q> to
- visit. The Bay Area, and San Francisco in particular, is
- complicated and has gotten a lot of things wrong over the
- years. Sometimes though, when it cuts loose and <a href="https://thesixfifty.com/get-to-know-the-curator-behind-many-of-sfos-world-class-museum-exhibits-773068a4ff98">gets it right</a>
- you end up with a museum in an airport.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-006">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-006">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.006.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1159160369/">Japanese Toys! From Kokeshi to Kaiju</a> (2013)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>If you measure things by foot traffic we are one of the
- busiest museums in the world. If that is the case we are also
- one of the busiest museums in the world that no one knows
- about. Nothing in modern life really prepares you for the idea that
- a museum should be part of an airport. San Francisco, as I've
- mentioned, is funny that way.</p>
-
- <p>People often ask: Where is the museum? Almost no one is aware
- that there are <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/galleries">over twenty gallery spaces spanning the
- terminals</a>, both before and after security. Over the years there
- have been <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/galleries/all/">three times that number</a>, rotating in and out as the
- airport has grown and changed.</p>
-
- <p>So, in a very real sense the airport <em>is</em> the museum.</p>
-
- <p>If people are ill-equipped to deal with the idea of a museum
- in an airport they are even less prepared to consider the idea
- that one has been there for the last 39 years. Lots of people will tell you about one or two exhibitions
- they've seen in a particular terminal but rarely have any idea
- of <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/galleries/1159157053/exhibitions/all">all the things that have come before it</a> in that very same
- spot.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-007">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-007">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.007.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>That's where <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/">the work I do</a> comes in to the picture.</p>
-
- <p>What is the promise of the internet – and in particular the
- web – if not the stringing together of all the things that came
- before or that follow any given moment?</p>
-
- <p><strong>When people ask me what I am doing I tell them it is <q>to
- ensure that every aspect of a trip to SFO, and every facet of
- someone’s time spent in the airport, leads back to the museum’s
- collection</q> and that we are using the internet to make that
- possible.</strong></p>
-
- <p>That means the terminal you're standing in or the boarding
- gate you're waiting at, the airline or
- aircraft you're flying on, the places you're traveling to, the
- gallery space you're looking at or the places the objects in an
- exhibition are from. All of it. <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/collection/">And all of it holds hands in
- some way with our collection.</a></p>
-
- <p style="font-style:italic;">By the way this is not how I see my role in relation to the
- airport or the museum. This is a mock-up I made to suggest
- installing the dinosaur that used to be on display in the old
- Terminal 2 out on the airfield. It's unlikely to ever happen
- but it's a nice idea, right?</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-008">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-008">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.008.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>I have also written <a href="https://mw19.mwconf.org/paper/mapping-space-time-and-the-collection-at-sfo-museum/">a 5,000 word paper about that work</a> for
- this conference and I don't want to spend my time with you today
- parroting everything I've already said there.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-009">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-009">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.009.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>I want to do a high-level overview of the what and how
- discussed in detail in the paper so that we can spend a little
- more time on the why.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-010">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-010">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.010.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>And then a little more time still on how I see our work in
- the context of some larger sector-wide dynamics that I believe
- we all need to address.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-011">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-011">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.011.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>To explain what we're doing I need to begin with some basic
- statements of truth in our world:</p>
-
- <ul class="rel">
- <li><p>That the notion of place is inseparable from an
- airport. After all everyone passing through our doors is coming
- from or going to some place.</p></li>
-
- <li><p>Like the passengers everything the museum displays in
- its gallery cases is also from some place.</p></li>
-
- <li><p>Part of SFO Museum's mandate is the history of the airport.</p></li>
-
- <li><p>History is inseparable from
- place.</p></li>
-
- </ul>
-
- <p>With that in mind we have made place and time (history) the
- joints – really a kind of double-joint – around which everything
- in the collection pivots. Everything means individual objects all the way up through
- the terminals and the airport itself and then beyond SFO to the
- other <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/airports/">airports</a>, <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/cities/">cities</a> and <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/countries/">countries</a> that are relevant to our
- collection. Then we multiply it all by time allowing any event – an
- exhibition, say – to be <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2019/01/14/gates/">situated in a context relevant to that
- moment</a>.</p>
-
- <p><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/buildings/1159396327/">SFO in 1982</a>, for example, was a very different place than it is today <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/buildings/1159157271/">in 2019</a>.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-012">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-012">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.012.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>For those places outside the airport campus we are using an
- existing openly licensed gazetteer of places called <a href="https://whosonfirst.org/">Who's On
- First</a> for record identifiers. This is our shared vocabulary for
- place.</p>
-
- <p>For those places inside the airport <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2018/08/28/whosonfirst/">we are extending the
- Who's On First model</a> to represent the buildings and interior
- spaces over the years.</p>
-
- <p>For example there are <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/search/?q=T1&placetype=terminal">multiple records for "Terminal 1"</a>, each
- representing a unique phase-shift in its history. A phase-shift
- is defined as any meaningful change in how a passenger might
- experience that place. For example, the experience and the
- meaning of "Terminal 1" will change once more this summer with
- the opening of a new and much larger terminal named after Harvey
- Milk.</p>
-
- <p>Each instance of Terminal 1 is linked to the record that
- precedes it and the record that follows it. We model any and all
- the architectural elements in our collection this way creating a
- tapestry of breadcrumbs that spans both place and history.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-013">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-013">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.013.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>We are extending this approach to <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/galleries/">galleries</a> and <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/">exhibitions</a> as well as
- things in our collection that don't have ground truth; they
- aren't physical places you can visit. This includes objects and constituents, <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2018/12/03/airlines/">airlines and
- aircraft</a>, <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2019/01/18/flights/">historical flight data</a> as well as <a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/blog/2019/01/02/surface/">photographs of
- things</a> directly and indirectly related to the collection.</p>
-
- <p>This is ongoing work and we may still paint ourselves in to a
- few corners but we think it is a promising approach.</p>
-
- <p>I have always seen the <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20190114221103/https://labs.cooperhewitt.org/2013/giv-do/">Cooper Hewitt's search-by-colour
- functionality</a> as a deliberate attempt to manufacture avenues in
- to their collection for people who do not already have an
- intimate knowledge of the decorative arts. We are trying to do
- the same thing, but with space and time, for our collection.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-014">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-014">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.014.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>We are building for the web first, rather than targeting any
- of the big platform vendors.</p>
-
- <p><strong>The web embodies principles
- of openness and portability and access that best align with the
- needs, and frankly the purpose, of the cultural heritage
- sector.</strong></p>
-
- <p>We are also publishing everything as openly-licensed data. We
- have chosen to publish everything using the <a href="https://macwright.org/2015/03/23/geojson-second-bite.html">GeoJSON</a> format
- because it has a near-zero barrier to entry, is flexible enough
- to accommodate museum-specific metadata and because it is
- supported by nearly every geospatial application, open and
- closed source, on the market today. Everything we publish has
- location baked in to it from the start.</p>
-
- <p>There is one other important twist in the way we are
- publishing open data.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-015">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-015">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.015.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>Historically the model for most digital or web-based
- initiatives has been to first export data from an internal
- collections management system. Second, that data is massaged in
- to an intermediate form for use by the project at hand and then
- third, exported again in to a typically bespoke machine-readable
- format.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-016">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-016">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.016.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>We have changed the order of things to publish the open data
- representation first and then, from there, to build our own
- websites and services on top of that.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-017">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-017">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.017.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>Everything I've described so far has been built using <a href="https://github.com/sfomuseum-data">the
- same raw materials</a> that we've made available for you to do
- something with. This introduces a non-zero cost in the build
- process for the public-facing museum efforts but we believe it's
- worth the cost.</p>
-
- <p>But why, right?</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-018">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-018">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.018.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1159160665/">Stepping Out: Shoes in World Cultures</a> (2017)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>First of all we <em>want</em> other people to build new interfaces and
- new services, new "experiences" even, on top of our collection
- so this is a way to keep ourselves honest. If we can't build
- something with this stuff why should we imagine you will?</p>
-
- <p>Second, we want to ensure that the data we release and the
- manner in which it is published, is actually robust and flexible
- enough to engender a variety of interfaces and uses because we
- <em>need</em> that variety. It is
- important to the museum because I don't believe there is, or
- should be, only one master narrative in to the collection.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-019">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-019">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.019.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1226603769/">Barbie® Takes A Vacation to Exotic Places </a> (1996)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>To some degree all museums have reluctant audiences. Our
- visitors will not, and do not, warm up to our collections in the
- same way or at the same pace. This is especially true in an
- airport where people don't expect to find a museum in the first
- place and where our audience doesn't fit neatly in to a handful
- of demographic boxes.</p>
-
- <p>As such we have an incentive to ensure that our work affords
- us the ability to iterate and experiment with as wide a range of
- interfaces and applications as possible, and for them to be just
- as fast and cheap to produce as they are to sustain over long
- periods of time and left to grow roots, to be nurtured.</p>
-
- <p>We need to put in place an infrastructure that allows us to
- manage the cost of failure and germination, equally. A common
- mistake we make with digital initiatives in the cultural
- heritage sector is to assume those are same thing. They are not.</p>
-
- <p>We need to start designing around the idea of false starts.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-020">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-020">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.020.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1226612011/">Artist's Furniture: New Dimensions and Statements in Design</a> (1982)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>There is another, more practical, reason to design for false
- starts:</p>
-
- <p>In 2019, if the past is any guide, most if not all the
- digital initiatives we work on today are destined to fail. More
- likely, they will just be left to die on the vine. Go ahead and take
- a moment to admire this beautiful chair while you let that sink in.</p>
-
- <p>This is the elephant in the room, in every room where we talk about
- this stuff. It is a complex and nuanced subject, not one we have
- time to discuss properly here but it's real. My own feeling is
- that at its root it boils down to the problem of long-term staffing that
- permeates the sector – of hiring and more importantly keeping
- people with the requisite skills around.</p>
-
- <p>Saying that, though, also a bit like being in the middle of a
- hurricane and complaining about the problem of hurricanes. Right
- now, the immediate problem is just getting through to the other
- side of the storm.</p>
-
- <p>Right now the problem is thinking about how to build things
- to survive the short-term enthusiasms and trigger-finger
- disillusionments that seem to define our efforts. To prevent a
- reset to zero with each and every false start.</p>
-
- <div style="font-style:italic;">
- <p>At this point, and based on some conversations I had during
- the conference, it's probably worth being explicit about a
- couple things in a way that I wasn't during the talk.</p>
-
- <p>First, saying that we need to <q>manage the cost of
- failure</q> or <q>design for false starts</q> should not be
- confused with the maxim of <q>failing fast (and failing
- often)</q>. This has been rightly called out as a kind of intellectual dodge to accommodate and
- legitimize lazy and sloppy practices that don't consider or
- actively ignore their consequences. So, not that.</p>
-
- <p>At the same time the
- worst possible outcome for the museum sector would be to use
- that critique as an excuse to continue with its own
- problematic working practices that have favoured overpriced
- aspirational battleships whose worth, whose success and failure, is measured only in
- third-party validation.</p>
-
- <p>There is a way to work fast and cheap and do things the
- right way, all while being forgiving of honest mistakes along
- the way. It's hard work to juggle all those concerns but
- that is not the same as <q>impossible</q>. Sometimes failure really
- is the manifestation of negligence but just as often it is the
- guide rail we use to understand the shape of success.</p>
-
- <p>Second, to say that everything we do today <q>will fail</q>
- is not meant suggest we should just kick back, give up, get
- our zen on and go to the bar. Not at all. It's pretty awful
- watching what has happened to all the good work produced over
- the years. It's wrong. It's wrong but it still happens and for
- those reasons we need to be clear-eyed about what's going on
- in order that we might figure out how to stop it from happening
- again and again and again...</p>
-
- </div>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-021">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-021">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.021.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- <div class="exhibition-title"><a href="https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/exhibitions/1226603375/">Building for Air Travel</a> (1997)</div>
- </div>
-
- <p>But why, indeed?</p>
-
- <p>Let's take it for granted that a core function – again, a
- purpose – of the cultural heritage sector is access. From there
- let's imagine that access can be defined along an axis spanning
- broadcast to recall.</p>
-
- <p>Broadcast being the ability to have your contemporary efforts
- reach as many people as possible with the least amount of
- friction. Recall being the ability for those same people to access all
- that broadcast material after the fact when you have moved on to
- some other contemporary concern.</p>
-
- <p>The internet, it's clear, has been a boon to both but if we
- focus solely on broadcasting, on the "Channels" and on experiences in the moment
- then we are presented with something of an existential
- problem because the humanities are predicated on the idea of revisiting a
- subject or an idea and on revisiting it repeatedly.</p>
-
- <p><q>The past keeps changing,</q> the historian <a href="http://www.margaretmacmillan.com/">Margaret
- MacMillan</a> has said, <q>because we keep asking different questions
- of it.</q></p>
-
- <p>Put bluntly: Without recall there is little to revisit and if
- there is no revisiting is there even a cultural history?</p>
-
- <p>The internet, and <em>specifically the web</em>, has made recall and
- by extension access possible in a way that we have genuinely
- never known before. In 2019 the web is not <q>sexy</q> anymore
- and compared to native platforms it can sometimes seems
- lacking, but I think that speaks as much to people's desire for
- something <q>new</q> as it does to any apples to apples comparison. On measure – and that's the important part: on measure
- – the web affords a better and more sustainable framework for
- the cultural heritage to work in than any of the shifting agendas of
- the various platform vendors.</p>
-
- <p>For many years I think we all saw Tim Berners Lee's decision
- to make the web open by design as quaint, the actions of a
- <q>nice scholarly British
- man</q>. In recent years, as the platform vendors (sometimes called <a href="https://blog.esterling.co.uk/2012/03/16/bruce-sterling-on-%E2%80%98the-stacks%E2%80%99/">the
- <q>Stacks</q></a>) continue to build higher and higher walls in to
- and out of their walled gardens, <a href="https://twitter.com/timberners_lee/status/228960085672599552">the magnitude of
- Berners Lee's choice</a> has become clearer and ever more important.</p>
-
- <p>This is why we have chosen to do things in the ways I have described to you today.</p>
-
- </div>
-
- <div class="slide" id="mw-2019-022">
-
- <div class="image640">
- <a href="#mw-2019-022">
- <img src="https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2019/04/08/post/images/mw-2019.022.jpeg"/>
- </a>
- </div>
-
- <p>In closing I'd like to leave you with a passage
- from the opening of <a href="https://chireviewofbooks.com/2018/01/16/how-emily-wilson-translated-the-odyssey/">Emily Wilson's translation</a> of Homer's The Odyssey:</p>
-
- <blockquote><pre>Tell the old story
- for our modern times
- Find the beginning</pre></blockquote>
- </div>
|