Main Content
Conference Publication
Doing Digital Film History: Concepts, Tools and Practices
Sarah-Mai Dang, Tim van der Heijden, Christian Gosvig Olesen (eds.): Digital Film Historiography. Concepts, Tools and Practices (Studies in Digital History and Hermeneutics, Volume 5), Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2024. [forthcoming]* (Conference Publication)
How has the digital turn shaped the practices of film historical research and teaching? While computational approaches have been used by film historians since the 1960s and 1970s, the arrival and use of digital tools and methods in recent decades has fundamentally changed the ways we search, analyze, interpret, present, and so think and write about film history – from digital archival and curatorial practices, data-driven search, and analysis of film historical collections to the visualization and dissemination of film historical materials online. While film historians have increasingly embraced the new possibilities brought by digital technologies, their practical, epistemological, and methodological implications need further exploration. What opportunities does the digitization of film historical sources provide for film historians? What new questions can be raised by using digital methods? What new perspectives emerge from analyzing, interpreting, and visualizing film historical data at the levels of both “close” and “distant” – or “scalable” – reading and viewing? By focusing on the concepts, tools, and practices of digital film historiography, this edited volume aims to contribute to a better understanding and critical reflection on the changes and continuities of doing film history in the digital age.