Information Science, cultural heritage and the digital revolution: defining a future beyond technology
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54886/scire.v11i1.1505Abstract
The disciplinary relations between Information Science and cultural heritage are explored in the context of the digital revolution. This relation goes beyond the instrumental character that Information Science has for almost any other discipline, as the very purpose of documentation is to preserve and make accessible the cultural heritage in its different aspects. As the technical aspects of information management, processing and retrieval are absorbed by the technologists, specially by the computer scientists, the core reference of Information Science to the non-material aspects of cultural heritage —including scientifi c heritage— is becoming one of the rising stars in the horizon of the discipline, specially around the concept of social memoryDownloads
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Copyright (c) 2005 Authors retain their copyright, but transfer the exploitation rights (reproduction, distribution, public communication and transformation) to the journal in a non-exclusive way and guarantee the right to the first publication of their work to the journal, which will be simultaneously subjected to the license CC BY-NC-ND. Authors take whole personal responsibility on fulfilling all the appropiate ethical codes and laws, and obtaining all the necessary copyright permissions regarding their articles. Institutional and self- archiving is allowed and encouraged.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
© 1996- . Authors retain their copyright, but transfer the exploitation rights (reproduction, distribution, public communication and transformation) to the journal in a non-exclusive way and guarantee the right to the first publication of their work to the journal, which will be simultaneously subjected to the license CC BY-NC-ND. Authors take whole personal responsibility on fulfilling all the appropiate ethical codes and laws, and obtaining all the necessary copyright permissions regarding their articles. Institutional and self- archiving is allowed and encouraged.