Incubating
Visual Arts Research's "Born Digital" Issue
Guest Editors Ryan M. Patton and Aaron
D. Knochel
Our
journey to the Visual Arts Research: Born Digital special issue began in the
fall 2013 when we started collaborating on a manuscript to review digital
scholarship constituted in the field of Art Education. In what became "As We
May Publish: Digital Scholarship and the Future(s) of Art Education" (Knochel &
Patton, 2014), we surveyed activities within and outside of the field of art
education and engaged in speculation about the nature of the technological
ecology: how might a digital publication afford different multimedia
opportunities for art education and knowledge generation? Further, if
advantages were possible, what would be needed to sustain these digital texts
as extended textual forms and reach a broader, more diverse global audience?
Despite
early efforts to use digital spaces for research, from our perspective in 2013,
digital scholarship and online publication in art education remained
skeumorphic translations of traditional print publications. What we suggested
then, and continue to believe, is the need for innovation in scholarly
publishing through digital scholarship. While print modes of scholarly
publications continue to be privileged as this special issue is published, 21st
century scholarship is being shaped and morphed by digital platforms: journals
distributed as electronic documents; social networks sharing academic and
professional resources; and peer review processes managed on open journal web
platforms. Increasingly, major publishers are developing robust digital
platforms to distribute journal content by making electronics documents
available, and offering a range of tools for authors to promote their research
so they can more effectively market the availability of their content. It is as
if scholarly publishing has entered an uncertain business model somewhere
between the distributed direct-sales model of Amway and Etsy's networked labor
force. Despite these developments, in surveying the current field of art
education, there are few venues advancing scholarly practices living and
thriving as multimodal digital manifestations. So in our call for this special
issue we asked authors to engage with the question of how might scholarly
activity be born digital, augmenting
current practices of research in art education, by expanding opportunities in
knowledge creation?
When
we first proposed our idea to the editorial team of Visual Arts Research, we balanced our desire to think ambitiously
about what digital platforms may offer to academic platforms and art education
authors, while being wary of the hype of digital media and learning. Marc Prensky (2001) coined the term "digital native" and "digital immigrant" as metaphors to
frame the generational shift demarcating the emergence of tech-savvy learners,
or at least born in an era with a networked and pervasive technological
ecology. The digital native and immigrant concepts receive push back for the
ways they are wielded to assume technological knowledge. However we do
gravitate to the idea that our era is
increasingly filled with digital systems, processes, and objects. At the
time of our 2014 article, our core challenge was to try to understand how
digitality was affecting scholarship as practices associated with academic
labor and knowledge creation. Was scholarship born digital doing something different, and if so how? We believed
the most obvious place to look first was the impact that digital systems and
platforms were having on academic publishing. Born digital scholarship in the form of publishing has its
exemplars: Kairos (online since 1995) is a peer-reviewed Rhetoric and Composition journal,
encouraging scholarship that is interactive, networked, and utilizing
multimedia. Other examples including Vectors,
American Institute of Graphic Art's Loop, the Institute for the
Future of the Book, Scalar,
recently used for an issue of The Art Bulletin (2013) and the book Flows of Reading (2013). Art
education journals Voke and Visual Culture & Gender also present
multimodal research using digital publishing platforms. Building on the
innovative spirit showcased with VAR's
graphic novel issue (2012), our call for papers asked scholars to question,
investigate, and expand the conversation about the ecology of art education
scholarship to specifically address work that is born digital.
However,
expanding any ecology can come at a cost or reallocation of resources. In our
earlier efforts to understand the possible futures of digital scholarship in
art education, we utilized Selfe, Hawisher, and Berry's (2009) ideas on
sustaining scholarly efforts in the face of rapidly changing digital publishing
environments. Selfe et al. (2009) note four possible paths for the future to
sustain the humanities in higher education. The first path, traditional print
scholarship can be sustained, but will change its value and form. On the second
path, scholarly production will shift and change over time, turning into
digital environments to be maintained and circulated. The third path employs
different modes of communication, not limited to writing, including images,
audio and video. The fourth path proposes social networks and collaborative
scholarship to support new forms of contributions and research. In each path,
the authors recognize scholarship printed on paper will not remain the default
method of academic discourse. Considering these prognostications 3+ years
later, it is clear art education scholarship has developed trajectories
navigating all four paths. In asking authors to consider their born digital scholarship we wanted them
to think not only of the venues of publications, but the nature of scholarly
data in publishing. We ask contributors to speculate on how art education
publications can distribute burgeoning research in real-time rather than with
lead-time, using hyperlinks rather than references, remixing rather than
paraphrasing, and exploring time-based and timely scholarship. Submissions were
encouraged to incorporate hypertext, video, audio, location-based, interactive,
data-driven, and real-time media, instead of text and static images only.
We
are also interested in how scholarly publications born digital may impact issues concerning accessibility. Digital
information increases the opportunity to be transcoded into different
modalities impacting how readers can access content, whether it means a screen
reader reciting text for a blind user, or connecting mobile devices with remote
locations. In 2013 and now, we perceive issues of access to digital scholarship
and online publication as deeply related to the complex realities of global
communication and readership. We hold our exuberance in check, because connecting
to the internet is a global network fraught with persistent inequalities to
access continuing to illustrate the economic and social realities of
globalization. Persistent issues of internet access particularly impact
multimodal content requiring high bandwidth. As we discussed in 2013,
"competing trends in broadband and mobility may inspire a response in digital
scholarship that asks surprising questions in light of globalization: for
example, what would an academic journal look like if it were designed for a
mobile phone?" (p. 273).
The
suggestion of a mobile phone as a publishing platform is perhaps another way of
perceiving the increased role of discrete scholarship on microblogging
platforms such as Twitter. The question of tweeting and microblogging as
scholarship ignites many issues in academia from the role it may play in tenure
review processes to the exposure, both good and bad, it brings to scholars in
various stages of their career (Ross, 2016). Some of academia has embraced
digital writing like twitter or blogs as acceptable forms of scholarship,
understanding the reach and speed of digital platforms for public scholarship
(Schalet, 2016). Many academic journals are quickly moving to have a digital
presence, either publishing their articles online first, or creating digital
versions of print issues as part of this trend to accept digital publications
in academia. Publishing digitally expands the audience for academic writing,
however most academic journals publish at speeds stifling the relevance of
academic writing by ignoring the pace of change. For example, the co-editor
Patton had an article accepted that took three years for the publishing
schedule to put it in print. Because the article dealt with technological
innovations, the delayed publishing schedule required significant revisions to
the final article.
When
we wrote the 2014 article "As we may publish" we didn't deeply consider the
rapid changes of research consumption by the general public and academia. As
noted in the post from the Twitter handle @Academics Say, high impact journals
are losing their influence in academia Lozano, Larivière & Gingras, 2012). So
what does this mean and why should academics care about a tweet on scholarship?
To begin with, @Academics Say has 225,000 followers with 24 million views per
month (Hall, 2016). Simply stated, @Academics Say is widely (and regularly)
read. @Academics Say tweets about academia, often humorously. @Academics Say
author, Nathan Hall, an Associate Professor of Education at McGill University,
has used his Twitter account to recruit research subjects and conduct research.
This example shows how using born digital writing as an academic, whether it is to conduct research or as a method to
publish, is an important consideration for current and future scholars. We see
this form of discrete scholarship as a continuing area of expansion for
research. For example, Jorge Lucero et al. (2016) traces a Facebook dialogue
about the audience and authors of Art
Education. Microblogging sites like Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr hold
promise as potential sites of knowledge generation and digital scholarship in
the field of art education.
Discrete
scholarship utilized on popular social media and microblogging platforms also
highlights points of access to scholarly work. Increasingly, members of the
scientific community are calling for free access to journal articles stemming
from U.S. government funded research and discoveries (Mayyasi, 2013).
Historically, academics and researchers gave precedence to publishing in
journals behind paywalls, requiring individuals and libraries who can afford
the leading research publications to pay for subscriptions. Researchers
themselves have created ways to get around paywall barriers by posting their
work to their own websites, or social media platforms like Academia.edu,
Researchgate.net and Google Scholar. However, these sites remain specialized
with targeted academic communities. For new researchers conducting internet
searches and unversed in the literature of the art education field, they can
easily overlook or be unaware of previous findings (Hafeli, 2009). K-12 teachers who
don't have access to journal subscriptions, but are invested in research, may
also be isolated and constrained by available resources. Problems with research
literature found on the internet is it may not have been properly vetted or
cited, since barriers for publication are removed. Uneven access to
peer-reviewed literature and quality journalism impacts both the rigor of new
research and the expansion of participation in research literature. This is not
inconsequential, as we saw in the 2016 U.S. Presidential election. "Fake news"
(Silverman & Alexander, 2016; The Guardian, 2016) and imbalanced reporting
(Vavreck, 2016) took hold of the public's conscious, further entrenching people
in their beliefs, regardless of factual evidence.
In
addition to issues of paywall access focused on publishers, authors, and
readers, there is also the issue of access to a sustainable archive. As we
worked with the University of Illinois Library to figure out the technical
requirements to support this special born
digital issue, we worked within the constraints of how the publication
could live on the internet. Through our (relatively short) lifetime,
publications on floppy disc, CD, DVD, and different kinds of computer file
formats, have become unreadable without special equipment or software. By
choosing a web-based platform as the born
digital format for this issue, we hope to circumvent as many problems of
archivability as we can. We realize it may be quixotic to try and make a
digital publication permanently archivable, but we also know valuable research
literature looks to the future as well as can be retrieved from past, making
predictions of where a field can (or should) go through research. Ultimately
future generations of researchers decide which efforts to continue on from
prior generations, but it is our responsibility to develop strategies in
archiving so that these choices may be made.
A
part of our own work in born digital scholarship in art education may take as an example the struggles of grey
literature and transdisciplinary research in art, science, and technology. Grey
literature refers to research produced outside of traditional venues for
distribution namely academic publishers and art museums. For example if
research using arts-based methods or alternative forms of media texts (e.g.
video, audio, interactive) do not have platforms for distribution or archiving,
this research may be lost or untraceable. Executive Editor of Leonardo Roger Malina and MIT Press have
begun a new initiative called ARTECA (http://arteca.mit.edu/) that intends to address the problem of ephemeral data and grey
literature in art/science/technology by adapting to the needs of research, file
formats, and publishing (MIT Press, 2016). It is our belief that digital
scholarship will only grow in the field of art education, yet ultimately this
kind of work is doomed to exist in the nether spaces of grey literature unless
we continue to push for robust publishing platforms and sustainable practices.
In
this issue we called for short-form submissions featuring online projects and
long-form submissions focusing on born
digital scholarship. In addition, we invited submissions from art education
scholars demonstrating a long term commitment to this topic, or serving in
roles that make significant contributions to the field's development of born digital scholarship such as the
National Art Education Association (NAEA) Research Commission. We organized the
issue under three concepts: places of scholarship, play, and pedagogy, bringing
together themes emerging from the submissions that suggest prominent threads in
the nature of the work.
Places
of Scholarship (COMMISSION>MUSEUM>JOURNAL)
The
question of scholarship is central to our call and throughout this process we
encountered the proliferation of scholarship into an increasing number of
places. A central component to the expansion of digital scholarship is
expansion itself; from small, informal communications building nuanced
portfolios of discrete scholarship to the increased capacity afforded by more
powerful computing found in big data methodologies. These expanding spaces of
scholarship are fed by private and public sources, including professional
organizations invested in the health of art education as a professional field
and research community. We begin with the invited submission from NAEA Research
Committee (RC) Chair Mary Hafeli, Associate Chair Juan Carlos Castro, and
commissioners Julia Marshall and Chris Grodoski, the committee crafts a
statement focused on the activities of the RC and its digital portfolio. These
representatives of the RC discuss the role of the NAEA to cultivate an
ecosystem of research, particularly for this issue, those living cultures born digital through the Interactive
Cafe, webinars, and an evolving web presence. What the RC's ecosystem indicated
to us is the expansion of art education scholarship into the different places
where art education happens. Reviewing programs in higher education and the
various employment where art teachers find themselves indicates a deeper
consideration for the places where art education happens. Schools, community
centers, and museums are all important places for art educators' employment.
Jennifer E. Henel, Curatorial
Coordinator for Digital Content at National Gallery of Art, provides a
case study of how the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. responded to
the need to create born digital museum publications, outlining how their office created a sustainable model for
future museum scholarship. Henel's contribution to the call reminds us how the
spaces of digital scholarship in art education must also grapple with the ways
it is expanding into a more diverse range of places of learning. A part of this
expansion is in the online spaces of the internet as well: changes in hybrid
coursework, increasing online communities for arts professionals, increased
curricula utilizing digital platforms, and the extension of scholarship into
the global audience of the internet are all important parts of our born digital ontology. We invited Art
Education professors Karen Keifer-Boyd and Deborah Smith Shank to
discuss the evolution of the journal they created, Visual Culture and Gender, recently marking its 10-year
anniversary. In their essay, Keifer-Boyd and Smith Shank discuss how the
journal's online format supports new forms of born digital research and inquiry. Keifer-Boyd and Smith Shank's
review of their experiences creating and guiding the journal over the last ten
years provides insight as to the opportunities and challenges of supporting born digital publications.
Play
(NARRATIVE>ROLE PLAY>DIGITAL DEATH) or
(BEGINNINGS>TRANSITIONS>ENDS)
Not
only does born digital scholarship
offer a range of new places for scholarship, it also offers new modalities to
encounter the research text. In 2013, we surveyed what were the opportunities
for digital scholarship to offer new forms of research texts from multimedia to
real time data. What these new forms provide to the author is a range of
expressive tools by which research findings can be communicated, but it also
offers new ways to involve the reader in exploring and experiencing research
findings. With increased participatory frameworks for research, readers playing
with the findings of art education research may present new emergent ways of
knowing that can drive inquiry in exciting ways. Utilizing interactive
platforms and computational frameworks to re-present research findings holds
great promise for the field and we capture some of those efforts in this issue.
Christine Liao in her project submission makes the argument that new media can
be used effectively for arts-based research by creating interactive artworks.
Liao uses the program Twine to create a hypertext interactive fiction (http://avatar-making.neocities.org/).
In the essay portion of her project Liao makes the argument that creating
interactive games works like research processes, requiring analysis,
reanalysis, and retooled methods of organization. Adetty Pérez Miles and Kevin
Jenkins in their project submission also use the non-linear web tool, Twine, to
promote learning about gender identities, trans issues, and creating positive
environments through an interactive story. They argue interactive tools like
Twine are an example of how media-rich platforms have the potential to expand
how we create, consume, and produce texts. In both of these examples the research
text becomes an interactive site where information is more akin to an
experience than a report, leaving the reader in the position of a user that can
play the text like a game. The gamification of born digital research brings into consideration the very cycle of
life and death as players engage in openings and closures through digital
platforms. As an inversion of our call for research on born digital scholarship, Robert W. Sweeny, a longtime leading
scholar in the field of Art Education and digital media studies, contemplates
digital death and what happens when one dies within networks that are ephemeral
as well as tangible. Sweeny highlights the hauntology of digital technologies
as their impacts to our scholarship and educational performances when they are
invaded by memories, habits, and ghosts in the machine. While we ponder the
newness of opportunities created by born
digital publication methods, Sweeny reminds us we need to ponder how our
digital lives remain when we no longer breathe life into these identities.
Pedagogy
(DISRUPTION>ASSESSMENT>CRITIQUE>GENEALOGY)
In
the cycle of beginnings and endings, digital life and death, we can perceive
the performance of pedagogy as central to our practices becoming informed and
crafted through born digital ontologies. In what Sweeny (2004) has called a digital visual culture, our
focus takes a slight shift to zero in on born
digital research and publishing, but pedagogy is integral to art education
research. In this section authors approach pedagogy through theory, classroom
activities, and historical patterns. In an effort to better represent the
complex entanglements and intersections of theory and the girls' digital
productions, Courtnie N. Wolfgang, Olga Ivashkevich, and OK Keyes introduce
Glitch Feminism as a conceptual framework for using digital tools creatively to
disrupt normative gendered identities. Their project links text, still images,
and moving images in nonlinear space, prompting the reader to move back and
forth between conceptual ideas and visual representations to embrace
incompleteness, ambiguity, and inquiry. Student-created images are an important
component of art pedagogy. How student work is assessed is integral to many
forms of art education research. Pamela G. Taylor shares experiences,
possibilities and implications related to visualization and assessment in art
education as data and as an artistic process. In Taylor's essay she describes
the process of coding undergraduates reflection journals used to critically
ponder, explore, connect, and document their service-learning experiences
mentoring elementary school students. Engaging students through their images,
and supporting them in and outside the art classroom, art educators can help
guide their students through life processes. Cindy S. Jesup utilizes the
process of critique when understood as a way to systematically explore and
discuss the technical, contextual, and interpretive aspects of artwork as a
model that may be used to analyze hazardous digital behavior so that future teachers
and students can be better prepared for their digital lives. Decisions that
manifest to live on the internet can have profound effects to the trajectory of
a person's life. Other life decisions, like choosing where to go to college, a
person's major, and mentors also have a profound effect. Justin P. Sutters offers a prospectus of his visualization research focusing on understanding the
academic and scholarly lineages that populate the pedagogical and research
space of art education scholarship. Using survey and other open source data
visualization software, Sutters project shows the pathways and connections to
the scholars in the art education field.
Conclusions
At
the conclusion of this process, with the issue full of articles and projects
begin to flesh out the range of born
digital scholarship currently in the field of art education, we are left
asking what other forms of born digital scholarship are missing? In our original article we were intrigued with the
possibility of submissions using large cultural data sets (i.e. big data) and
creating projects using real-time platforms such as trending hashtags on
Twitter or news feeds. Efforts like these would require carefully constructed
research models and user interfaces, along with a technical knowledge that may
be daunting for a scholar to undertake and still at the fringes of our field.
Looking far off on the horizon, born
digital research and publications using geolocation data, virtual reality,
artificial intelligence, or haptic feedback might be future directions for art
education. Ultimately, we believe a born
digital migration does not have a final destination, rather born digital scholarship is a journey we
are excited to pursue. We invite others to join us.
We'd
like to extend our appreciation to the authors, reviewers, and Visual Arts Research team for extending
this opportunity to us as guest editors. With all of the potential for things
to run amuck, we applaud their bravery.
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