Greater good, empowerment and democratization? Affordances of the crowdsourcing transcription projects

Authors

  • Joanna Iranowska University of Oslo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i2.2758

Keywords:

digitization, crowdsourcing, text collections, online participation, interfaces

Abstract

Digital technology and Internet access have created new possibilities for museums and archives for digitization of their collections. Steadily, more museums are experimenting with inviting their audiences to participate in tagging images, annotating, transcribing historical texts or cropping photographs. This article is an exploration of visual and functional aspects of various digital interfaces frequently being used in crowdsourcing projects involving transcribing manuscripts. The empirical material has been collected through interviews with the editors of the projects and systematic technical walkthroughs of MediaWiki platforms (Edvard Munch’s Writings and Transcribe Bentham) and Zooniverse platforms (AnnoTate and Shakespeare’s World). The analysis aims to explore platforms’ affordances (Gibson 1978), in other words the opportunities that the layout and design offer to users interacting with facsimiles of manuscripts (‘digital networked objects’) (Cameron and Mengler 2015). The questions raised are whether and how the interfaces empower users and perform as a democratic actor providing the volunteers with agency. The platforms’ interfaces have emerged as an important and undervalued actor-network of elements which configure heterogeneous relations among actors and influence users’ engagement.

Author Biography

Joanna Iranowska, University of Oslo

Joanna Iranowska is a PhD-candidate in Museum Studies at the University of Oslo. Between 2012 and 2015 she worked as a research assistant on the project Edvard Munch’s Writings. She is a part of the research project Museum: A Culture of Copies and is currently working on her dissertation on digital reproductions within the art museum context with a specific focus on the collection of the Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway.


Centre for Museum Studies, University of Oslo

Postboks 1010 Blindern 0315 Oslo, Norway

+47 463 69 520

+47-22855235


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Published

07/18/2019

How to Cite

Iranowska, J. (2019). Greater good, empowerment and democratization? Affordances of the crowdsourcing transcription projects. Museum & Society, 17(2), 210–228. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i2.2758

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Section

Articles