HD-248450-16 | Digital Humanities: Digital Humanities Start-Up Grants | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute | 3D Printing as Humanistic Inquiry | 5/1/2016 - 8/31/2017 | $39,498.00 | James | W. | Malazita | Dean | Andrew | Nieusma | Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute | Troy | NY | 12180-3590 | USA | 2016 | History and Philosophy of Science, Technology, and Medicine | Digital Humanities Start-Up Grants | Digital Humanities | 39498 | 0 | 38259.63 | 0 | A set of experiments with 3D printing and a three-day workshop in which scholars explore the philosophical and practical implications of fabrication and “making” in a humanities context.
This project brings together scholars at various stages of their careers from across the Humanities and Digital Humanities to participate in an intensive three-day 3D Making and Critique workshop and follow-on research. The project's goal is to materially brainstorm printed artifacts that serve as critical investigations, while providing time for reflection upon the broader social and environmental contexts of the 3D printing process. The intended results of the project will be to produce and disseminate early-stage critical objects, to generate reflexive theory and critique about 3D printing and making practices, to connect Humanities scholars across both the making and critical bodies of humanistic scholarship, and to create an action plan for collaborative written and made scholarship targeted for publication in open-access presses and exhibitions. |