
University of Tarapacá
University of Tarapacá
Funder
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2009 - 2013Partners:University of Tarapacá, University of Saint Francis Xavier, Fundacion Asur, Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore, BM +23 partnersUniversity of Tarapacá,University of Saint Francis Xavier,Fundacion Asur,Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore,BM,Centro Textiles Tradicionales del Cusco,University of San Simón,National Museum of Archaeology,National Museum of Archaeology,University of Essex,UCN,SIARB,University of Tarapacá,Higher University of San Andrés,Instituto de Lengua y Cultura Aymara,Museum of Ethnic Art and Folklore MUSEF,Victoria and Albert Museum,Anthropology Museum of Sucre Bolivia,V&A,British Museum,SIARB,INIAM-UMSS,BBK,Fundacion Asur,University of Essex,Catholic University of the North,UMSA,Institute of Aymara Language and CultureFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/G012180/1Funder Contribution: 853,884 GBPIn place of writing, textiles in Andean civilizations were developed over millennia by visually literate populations to document and display complex data. Academic studies worldwide are intrigued by this massive cultural use of information display, yet limited in methods of approach. Drawing on new methodologies combining fieldwork, digital documentation, information visualization and ontology, this project develops a common language for understanding Andean cloth to be shared between Visual, Computer and Museum Studies. \n\nResearch to date has established that textiles bear messages. Some are understood; others are still inaccessible due to the incomplete data sets available for scrutiny, discontinuous time sequences of samples, and limited correlation with comparative materials from the ethnographic and historical record, and commentaries from living weavers. To overcome this, we opt for regional rather than local sampling procedures to give us greater access to materials, while our interdisciplinary approach promotes greater sample contextualization. \n\nThrough data mining and other web-based techniques, this wider sample contextualization will be articulated to a digital structural mapping of cloth. Our hypothesis is that weaving techniques, as conservative organising features, have ontological associations that can be mapped in a working grammar of textile design, and correlated with socio-cultural and historical data. Centred in a weaver's perspective, our approach goes beyond the analysis of surface features of cloth to give precedence to its technical and structural properties. Existing software, adapted to express Andean cloth's 3D nature, will feed into our database design, together with digital photos, video and text data. Our interface design gives priority to content-oriented access, and a graphical concept browser, to express this weaving perspective visually.\n\nDatabase documentation, building on the site at the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies, Birkbeck College London (bbk.ac.uk/cilavs), will systematize visual textile information, permitting academic disciplines an ontology-based exploration of weaving structures that map the social semiotic relations between cultural practices and identities. Workshops with curators of European and Latin American collections will coordinate information collection, methods, and analysis. \n\nThe main project stages of data collection, analysis and organisation, articulated to innovative means of access and analysis, have broad cognitive and curatorial goals. A secondary applied aspect responds to concerns of regional weavers to defend their cultural patrimony from piracy, and introduce local weaving repertories into new educational curricula. Our software and database design will respond to both these needs. \n\nResearch context\nResearch in Bolivia, Peru and Chile, combined with museum research there and in the UK, focuses on 3 regions on the basis of previous ethnographic, archaeological and museological knowledge and contacts, and 3 time horizons: Tiwanaku, the Inka-early colony, and the contemporary.\n\nThis study is urgent. As a result of former educational trends, ignoring regional textile production in favour of an emerging global textile industry, modern forms of literacy, and out-migration from rural communities, younger generations no longer want to weave. Current NGO interventions too are changing regional design repertories, and hence historical continuities and identity questions. At the same time, contemporary politics are generating alternative educational demands that seek new identity-based curricula in a decolonizing context. Our ethnographic research concerns the cultural rescue of endangered weaving practices, while providing new methods to document and link them to emerging industries.\n
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in ProjectPartners:UCA, AALBORG UNIVERSITET, CENTRO DE APOIO AO DESENVOLVIMENTO TECNOLOGICO FUB, FUNDACION TECNOLOGICA DE COSTA RICA, UCV +33 partnersUCA,AALBORG UNIVERSITET,CENTRO DE APOIO AO DESENVOLVIMENTO TECNOLOGICO FUB,FUNDACION TECNOLOGICA DE COSTA RICA,UCV,Espoch,FH JOANNEUM GESELLSCHAFT M.B.H.,INSTITUTO POLITECNICO DE LEIRIA,University of Tarapacá,USFX,UNIVERSIDAD DE EL SALVADOR,University of Antioquia,Rafael Landívar University,UNA,UAB,ULA,University of Talca,UJMD,Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua, León,UIP,UCf,ITCR,Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua, Managua,UNESP,UJAT,INSTITUTO UNIVERSITARIO ASOCIACIONCRISTIANA DE JOVENES,Universidad Católica Bolivia San Pablo,University of Guayaquil,FLACSO,UniBg,University of Havana,Universidad Veracruzana,UDELAS,EMPRESA PUBLICA DE PRODUCCION Y DESARROLLO ESTRATEGICO DE LA UNIVERSIDAD ESTATAL DE MILAGRO,UT,ASOCIACION URUGUAYA ORT - UNIVERSIDAD ORT URUGUAY,FUNDACION DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DE COSTA RICA PARA LA INVESTIGACION,UCRFunder: European Commission Project Code: 574080-EPP-1-2016-1-ES-EPPKA2-CBHE-JPFunder Contribution: 994,199 EUR"The project presented pretends to create a Regional Observatory for Quality and Equity in Higher Education in Latin America (ORACLE). The project is based on the assumption that there is no possible quality without equity. For it, the project involves the participation of 35 universities from 15 countries from Latin America and 5 European countries. It will be developed for 36 months from 2016 to 2019.ORACLE is an innovative project although it seeks to give continuity and sustainability to 4 ALFA.3 projects supported by the EU. In order to achieve an optimal function of the Observatory, previously, it is going to be built a Quality and Equity Unit (UCE) in each one of the 30 universities that participate in the project. These UCE's will propose and design actions, policies and strategies of institutional quality assurance and equity. Likewise, these institutional units will operate in a reticulated way and they will be the starter point and the main emphasis of ORACLE. The creation of new structures will encourage the Organizational Development of the Higher Education institutions of ""la Región"".The groups in vulnerable situation that ORACLE's Observatory is focused on are a total of eight: indigenous people, women, people with disabilities, non- traditional students, population with very low HDI, immigrants, ethnic minority groups and citizens from rural areas. ORACLE aims to provide an integral and integrated service and, unlike other initiatives, it is not exclusively circumscribed on the academic development of the students, but it will also work with people in vulnerable situations among all levels (professors, students, administrative staff and managers) and all institutional functions: teaching, research and management."
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