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.
 

[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.

This page is referenced by: