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HomeEventsCritical Making, Creativity and Play For Disruptive Heritage Practice
Critical making, creativity and play for disruptive heritage practice

Critical making is a mode of engagement that can challenge and change interpretation and presentation of heritage. Matt Ratto defines critical making as a way to “use material forms of engagement with technologies to supplement and extend critical reflection...to reconnect our lived experiences with technologies to social and conceptual critique” (Ratto 2011:253). Connected with the concept of play as a mode of experience in cultural heritage, critical making can decenter interpretive authority and bring multiple stakeholders together to experiment creatively with heritage. In this seminar I present projects informed by anthropology, visual and media studies, and digital heritage that reveal the productive connections between theory-driven research and hands-on making. These include the presentation of archaeological sites in the popular virtual worlds of Minecraft and Second Life, explorations of light writing and alternate visualization techniques and the creation of augmented reality through aural interpretive landscapes.

Date & time

  • Mon 28 Apr 2014, 10:45 am - Wed 12 Apr 2017, 10:45 am

Location

Sir Roland Wilson Theatrette (Building #120), Australian National University

Speakers

  • Colleen Morgan

Event Series

Heritage and Museums Seminar Series