3.8 Article

Whose digital Middle Ages? Accessibility in digital medieval manuscript culture

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL IBERIAN STUDIES
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 15-27

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17546559.2021.2022738

Keywords

Accessibility; online availability; philology

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This essay discusses why online availability should not be conflated with accessibility in discussions of the digital humanities and medieval studies. Expert-oriented digital humanities projects and discussions of medieval Iberian studies often lose sight of the promises of democratization and accessibility valued by the digital humanities community, in favor of traditional philological demands.
This essay examines why online availability should not be conflated with accessibility in discussions of the digital humanities and medieval studies. Expert-oriented projects and discussions of the digital humanities in medieval Iberian studies tend to get lost in collation. These projects lose sight of the promises of democratization and accessibility that the digital humanities community values in favor of the traditional demands of philology.

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