Touchable Speculation: Crafting Critical Discourse with 3D Printing, Maker Practices, and Hypermapping

humanistic object

For instance, Staley names the objects he and his team make humanistic objects,1 which provides an additional method to extend the humanities from the discursive to the material and, so too, to other modes of material engagement.
 

Footnotes:
  1. David Staley, “On the ‘Maker Turn’ in the Humanities,” in Making Things and Drawing Boundaries: Experiments in the Digital Humanities, ed. Jentery Sayers, Debates in the Digital Humanities (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2017), 33.

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