Itinera's Displacements: A RoundtableMain MenuItinera's DisplacementsFraming #1: Itinera as renvoiChristopher Drew ArmstrongDisplacement #1: Itinera as MethodologyJennifer DonnellyDisplacement #2: Itinera as SiteLily Brewer and Meredith NorthDisplacement #3: Itinera as CodeVibeka McGyverFraming #2: Itinera as ClassroomAlison LangmeadChristopher Drew Armstrongd4432077657d8a0c6942cfcadf31b4972c877b15Lily Brewerfd1343e9d77488043312967064d900e930f4af55Jennifer Donnelly1eb0cf81bf15615ae94fbdfda5c9f48eb2057f1dAlison Langmead45b02a5aa4aae31e620320cfe8eed69638dc958aVibeka McGyver355578ca060d5cc1a61da1dcce649d082fc551b5Meredith North230239d5acaa96d4a0e35bc5c3c3512521459184 Published in Journal18: a journal of eighteenth-century art and culture Issue 5: Coordinates: Digital Mapping and 18th-Century Visual, Material, and Built Cultures (Spring 2018) Edited by Carrie Anderson and Nancy Um
Because a body is considered an object in Itinera, the Mummy of Turenne was created by the Vicomte de Turenne at the moment of his death in 1675.
12017-09-30T21:41:18-07:00Jennifer Donnelly1eb0cf81bf15615ae94fbdfda5c9f48eb2057f1dFigure 5 - Mummy of Turenne Data, Itinera, Back end of Objects Module Interface10This screenshot captures the back end data entry form for objects in Itinera, which project managers and project catalogers use to enter the necessary information to create the front end visualizations. Screenshot by Jennifer Donnelly, 2017.media/Figure 4.pngplain2018-05-10T00:12:53-07:00Mummy of TurenneScreen CaptureBackend of Itinera, showing the data entry formLauren Cesirof37e4e52c3d9a4ff08b7937020ee9048f11c6739