The (Uncommon) Challenge of the Cultural Commonwealth
A Review of Our Cultural Commonwealth: ACLS Report on Cyberinfrastructure for Humanities and Social Sciences
Our
Cultural
Commonwealth,
the 2006 report of the
American
Council of Learned Societies'
Commission
on Cyberinfrastructure for Humanities and Social
Sciences, makes a
rational and forceful case for coordinated action and clear policy on technology
in the humanities and social sciences.
The report is divided into three parts, corresponding to the commission's charge: an analysis and overview of the history and current state of humanities and social science cyberinfrastructure; an analysis of the needs and potentials of such an infrastructure; and an action plan for the future, including a set of eight recommendations in support of the framework established by the report. It complements, to a certain extent, the National Science Foundation's 2003 report, Revolutionizing Science and Engineering through Cyberinfrastructure.
Technology already exerts a powerful influence on the study and dissemination of cultural knowledge. The Internet has become a significant source of information for the specialist and layman alike. Cultural institutions like museums have embraced the web as a parallel site for their collections; academic institutions exploit internal and external digital databases of text and images to supplement traditional media; libraries are reinventing themselves as digital media centers. The practice of scholarship has been altered dramatically by such technologies as email, ubiquitous networking and digital presentation formats.
The commission's recommendations first define the characteristics that a humanities/social science cyberinfrastructure must have, including accessibility, sustainability and interoperability. In addition, the report suggests that facilitating collaboration and support for experimentation are key characteristics, the implications of which I will return to shortly.
The report's recommendations are broadly inclusive, in keeping with the commission's charge. The audience for the ACLS report is itself diverse: administrators, scholars, faculty, legislators, librarians, indeed anyone who has a stake in the humanities and social sciences or in the technology planning and development process. With this breadth of reach, the report must necessarily skim lightly over some of the issues that, for one constituent or another, might appear to be crucial. For example, the commission's recommendation that any cyberinfrastructure must leverage the interaction between public and private sectors raises the question of conflict between the business interests of private sector stakeholders and the need for reaching a wide audience at the lowest cost. The thorny problem of intellectual property rights and the "fair use" limitations of those rights must necessarily color any discussion of accessibility and interoperability. The economic benefits of the humanities, the "value-added" proposition that intellectual capital translates into material and cultural gain, is discussed as a way of justifying investment in a humanities cyberinfrastructure, although the fuller argument is beyond the scope of this report. This is not a weakness of the report, but it does indicate that the issues with which the commission grappled are complex and difficult.
The investment in time and money necessary to implement the goals outlined in the report must be seen against the larger picture of information technology in contemporary education and cultural practice. As any technology officer at a university, college, museum or library already knows all too well, the great cost of building, supporting and maintaining even the general technology infrastructure of an institution (including networking, file storage, email, security, and hardware) often prohibits or severely curtails the opportunity to develop specialized capabilities. While the authors of the report believe that investment in humanities cyberinfrastructure should be a matter of strategic priority, and indeed they make this their first recommendation, the argument for this priority rests upon (understandably) general notions of public good and future intellectual discovery. This is a recurring theme in the report--the public good brought by the humanities and social sciences justifies the effort to establish and support a unique technological ecosystem accessible to scholars and public alike. But the competition for resources within academic and cultural institutions is fierce, and the public good is often juxtaposed against the demands of marketing and institutional survival.
There are other, more specific challenges contained within the recommendations of the ACLS commission. At first glance, the recommendation that leadership for technology must be cultivated from within the humanities and social sciences makes a great deal of sense--who else understands the nature of the task more than those who practice the discipline? But how is this accomplished? How does the system breed technologically-savvy scholars willing to step up to a leadership role without sacrificing their academic interests?
The most daunting challenge alluded to in the report is the impact that technology has on the very culture of humanities and social science practice and scholarship. The report notes that established practice and a long tradition have made the humanistic disciplines conservative and risk-averse. The culture of the solitary scholar is so much a part of the fabric of academia that the notion of scholarly collaboration and collective discovery may seem alien and even threatening. Certainly collective effort is required to assemble the data that is essential to scholarly practice, and the existing scholarly and academic infrastructure that supports the humanities and social sciences is built upon the efforts of many individuals pooling their knowledge and providing access through journals, books, and collections. But the products of research, the fruits of scholarly labor, are more likely acts of individual insight, driven by established disciplinary expectations and practice, and turning inward to an audience of other experts.
How to cite this work
Gary Wells. "The (Uncommon) Challenge of the Cultural Commonwealth." Academic Commons Issue Name (Spring 2008): 15 March 2010. <http://www.academiccommons.org/>.- Login or register to post comments
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