Tag Archives: book chapter

Virtual Heritage: How Could It Be Ethical?

Latest book chapter in the works:

Virtual Heritage: How Could It Be Ethical? Invited chapter for The Routledge Handbook of Heritage Ethics, Andreas Pantazatos, Tracy Ireland, John Schofield and Rouran Zhang (eds.), Routledge, 2023.

Ranging from modified adaption of commercial games (game mods) to multi-million dollar 3D visualizations and web-based projects, virtual heritage projects have showcased cutting-edge technology and provided insight into understanding past cultures. While the research field of virtual heritage (virtual reality and related immersive and interactive digital technology applied to cultural heritage) is several decades old, its specific ethical issues have not been extensively addressed.

Six issues will be discussed in this chapter: cultural ownership; the depiction of humans no longer with us; obsessions with photorealism rather than the complex topic of authenticity; environmental costs; accidental social alienation; and the gamification of serious, traumatic, or personal content.

New Book Chapter Planned

Last week I was asked if I would write a book chapter for an edited volume “Difficult Pasts and Immersive Experiences” to be published by Routledge (History, Heritage Studies & Archaeology series) in 2021, edited by Dr. Agiatis Benardou and Dr. Anna Maria Droumpouki.

I suggested a chapter on the theoretical problems but also potential interaction design-related ways to create more reflective virtual environments to engage with these “difficult pasts”. I have been inspired by an article on Forbidden Knowledge by Stanley Godlovich, but I have now lost that paper reference (here is another: https://philosophicaldisquisitions.blogspot.com/2020/04/can-we-morally-judge-past-on-williamss.html)

Current working title: Chronological Relativism: Retrovisiting Dark and Forbidden Heritage.

Book chapter to write for 2021

With Dr Terhi Nurmikko-Fuller and Dr Katrina Grant (both at ANU), I have decided to write a chapter on serious games for medieval(!) purposes for an edited book by Dr Robert Houghton (publisher still to be confirmed) on medieval games.. but this is not due until March 2021. Still, does this sound potentially interesting?

Chapter 12 by Erik Champion, Terhi Nurmikko-Fuller, and Katrina Grant explores the ways in which Skyrim can be used and modified by undergraduate and postgraduate students to explain, through play, three related aspects of medieval society: the distinctive, related and unique characteristics of Romanesque and Gothic architecture, the art, craft and preservation of calligraphy, literature, inscription and lore; and the importance of the medieval landscape in art history.

 

 

New chapter: “Art History, Heritage Games, and Virtual Reality”

Traditionally, art history has been viewed as a concern about the context of creation, curation, critique, and classification of art, but its range and focus is seldom agreed on. A conventional view of art history may suggest that, as a field, it is dedicated to issues of classification and the development of related expertise in curation and critique. Yet, if we follow the arguments of the nineteenth-century philosopher Konrad Fiedler, 1 knowledge of historical form does not necessarily entail a knowledge of art, while knowledge of the history of art does not necessarily give one an understanding of art objects themselves, the material and symbolic qualities of an object of art, or deeper questions relating to the ontology of art.

update: we are allowed to upload author preproofs of our chapter and given the book is 524 pages, 34 authors and $319.20 Australian dollars in hardback format, that should make it more accessible. I will provide a link here when accepted at Curtin research espace.

 

Virtual Heritage Models: in Search of Meaningful Infrastructure

Above is title of book chapter being revised/reviewed for Ashgate’s Cultural Heritage Creative Tools and Archives (edited book).

At 7,799 words I hope I am not asked to revise upwards!

Alternative title: Preserving the Heritage Component of Virtual Heritage

Abstract:
Teaching virtual heritage through the careful inspection, contextualization and modification of 3D digital heritage models is still problematic. Models are hard to find, impossible to download and edit, in unusual, unwieldy or obsolete formats, and many are standalone 3D meshes with no accompanying metadata or information on how the data was acquired, how the models can be shared (and if they can be edited), and how accurate the scanning or modeling process was, or the scholarly documents, field reports, photographs and site plans that allowed the designers to extract enough information for their models. Where there are suitable models in standard formats that are available from repositories, such as in Europeana library portal, they are encased in PDF format and cannot be extended, altered or otherwise removed from the PDF. Part of the problem has been with the development of virtual heritage; part of the problem has been with a lack of necessary infrastructure. In this chapter I will suggest another way of looking at virtual heritage, and I will promote the concept of a scholarly ecosystem for virtual heritage where both the media assets involved and the communities (of scholars, shareholders and the general public) are all active participants in the development of digital heritage that is a part of living heritage.

—About 7000 words later —

Conclusion: A New Virtual Heritage Infrastructure

I hope I have been clear about three major points. I have argued that virtual heritage will not successful as digital heritage if it cannot even preserve its own models and it will not be effective if it cannot implement digital technologies great advantages: real-time reconfiguration to suit the learner, device and task at hand; individual personalization; increased sense of agency; automatic tracking and evaluation mechanisms; and filtered community feedback. My suggestion is to implement not so much a single file format but to agree upon a shared relationship between assets. For want of a better word, I have described the overall relationship of components of virtual heritage infrastructure as a scholarly ecosystem.

Secondly, in this new age of digital communication the 3D model must be recognized as a key scholarly resource (Di Benedetto et al., 2014). As a core part of a scholarly ecosystem the model should be traceable, it should link to previous works and to related scholarly information. I suggest that the model should be component-based so that parts can be directly linked and updated. Web models would be dynamically created at runtime. The model should be engaging so extensive playtesting and evaluation is required to ensure it actually does engage its intended audience. As part of a scholarly infrastructure, the 3D model format (and all related data formats) should be easy to find and reliable. It should not require huge files to download or it should at least provide users with enough information to decide whether and what to download. Metadata can also help record the completeness, measurement methodology and accuracy of the models and Linked Open Data can help connect these media assets in a sensible and useful way.

Thirdly, the community of scholars, students and the wider public should be involved and we must endeavour to meaningfully incorporate their understanding, feedback and participation, this is a core requirement of UNESCO World Heritage status. Community involvement is a must for scholars as well and so I suggest that the virtual heritage projects dynamically link to journals and refereed conference papers and to the list of tools and methods that were used in the project. A robust feedback system could help continually improve the system. Other shareholder issues such as varying levels of learning skills, and varying levels of knowledge required or cultural knowledge that needs to be hidden (privacy and ownership issues) should also be incorporated into the project.

new book chapter out: Travels in Intermedia[lity]

Today I received my copy of

Travels in Intermedia[lity]: ReBlurring the Boundaries (Interfaces: Studies in Visual Culture) [Paperback]

It took a long time to see this in print, so congratulations to the editor for his perserverance, and to the publishers, quite a nice looking book!

Table of contents includes the following chapters

• Travels in Intermedia[lity]: An Introduction – Bernd Herzogenrath

• Four Models of Intermediality – Jens Schröter
• 
Intermediality in Media Philosophy – Katerina Krtilova
• 
Realism and the Digital Image – W. J. T. Mitchell
• 
Mother’s Little Nightmare: Photographic and Monstrous Genealogies in David Lynch’s The Elephant Man Lars Nowak
• 
Laughs: The Misappropriated Jewels, or A Close Shave for the Prima Donna – Michel Serres
• 
Words and Images in the Contemporary American Graphic Novel – Jan Baetens
• Music for the Jilted Generation
: Techno and | as Intermediality – Bernd Herzogenrath
• 
Genuine Thought Is Inter(medial) – Julia Meier
• 
Theater and Music: Intermedial Negotiations – Ivana Brozi
• 
The Novel as Hypertext: Mapping Thomas Pynchon’s Against the Day – Brian W. Chanen
• 
Delightful Vistas: Revisiting the Hypertext Garden – Mark Bernstein
• 
Playing Research: Methodological Approaches to Game Analysis – Espen Aarseth
• 
The Nonessentialist Essentialist Guide to Games – Ear Zow Digital
• 
“Turn your Radio on”: Intermediality in the Computer Game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas – Gunter Süss
• 
Television as Network—Network as Television: Experiments in Content and Community – Ben Sassen
• 
Social Media and the Future of Political Narrative – Jay David Bolter

 

http://www.upne.com/TOC/TOC_1611682595.html

It is part of the University of New England Press Interfaces: studies in visual culture series

The below will be out next year, a new collection of essays on Intermedia, my chapter is on intermedia, games and the magic circle. Looking forward to finally seeing this in print!

Travels in Intermedia[lity]: ReBlurring the Boundaries, Bernd Herzogenrath, ed. Interfaces: Studies in Visual Culture Series, Dartmouth College Press, 2012. NB Not in stock or not yet published, expected: June 2012. URL: http://www.upne.com/1611682595.html

UPDATE: appears to be available at Amazon.com

Oxford Handbook of Virtuality: History and heritage in virtual worlds

I have been asked to write a chapter for the above book and the abstract for my chapter on  “History and heritage in virtual worlds” has just been formally accepted. There are about 50 authors (such as Brian Massumi, Bruce Damer, Michael Heim, Charles M. Ess, Angela Ndalianis and Anthony Steed) writing on various aspects of Virtuality over 53 chapters and it is a great honour to be asked to contribute in such prestigious company. Publication is expected to be in December 2012 (although some press releases seem to differ). The book will be edited by Dr Mark Grimshaw of Bolton University.

If you have virtual worlds dealing with history and heritage I’d be happy to consider reviewing, linking to or mentioning them in the chapter.

CFP: Game Mod Design Theory and Criticism

Call For Book Chapters: Game Mod Design Theory and Criticism

This will be both a practical and reflective book on game-mods, designing, playing and evaluating the quality, success and effectiveness of game engines for modding, individual game mod levels, related tools and techniques, and the social and cultural issues related to the design and use of game mods.

The type of book chapter content I am looking for:
· An overview of what is possible and what is commendable or admirable with exemplars.
· Critiques of game mods and game mod/engine technologies (and reviews of mods as creative and critical and reflective extensions of games and game audiences).
· The ethical and social implications using commercial game engines and the content supplied · A comparison of game mod technologies.
· Case studies (Unreal, Source, Panda 3d, Blender 3D, Neverwinter Nights, Marathon, XNA, Oblivion, Cobalt, Crystal Space, WoW, Halo, Far Cry and Crysis etc, Sims, Jedi Academy, Ogre 3D) etc.
· Feature art and aesthetics.
· Machinima features hindered and helped by mods.
· Review of terrible experiences trying to build game mods. · A feature list to help people choose the right game engine for their mod.
· Some sample chapters on how to get started, tips, quick step tutorials as simple 3D, animation, lighting, behaviors, interface customization.
· The social and cultural implications of using and designing game mods (issues with violent content, cultural empathy, copyright, educational issues and so on).

The publisher will be ETC Press, an academic, open source, multimedia, publishing imprint affiliated with the Entertainment Technology Center (ETC) at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and in partnership with Lulu.com The book will be published under a Creative Commons license. For more details about ETC Press refer http://www.etc.cmu.edu.

Time Line

· March 18 2011 Please send me a title and 300 word abstract, the earlier the better! Please email your submission to gamemodbook AT gmail DOT com · March 25 2011 you should have heard back from me.
· June 10 2011 draft chapters to me.
· And after many drafts and checks and proofs later…by the end of 2011 (optimistically speaking), publication!

Editor:
Associate Professor Erik Champion
Auckland School of Design, Albany Village Campus
College of Creative Arts
Massey University
Auckland New Zealand
email: nzerik AT gmail DOT com OR e dot champion AT massey DOT ac DOT nz for general questions.
Send submissions to gamemodbook AT gmail DOT com