STS Circle at Harvard
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Yanni Loukissas
Harvard, Berkman Center, metaLAB

on
Data Narratives of the Arnold Arboretum

Monday, October 21
12:15-2:00 pm
Maxwell Dworkin, 33 Oxford Street, Room 119

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Wednesday, October 16.

Abstract: The Internet inspires archives, museums, libraries and arboreta to 
make their collections more open, participatory, and democratic through data. 
This cluster of networked-age intellectual values is taking hold at 
institutions that carry long legacies of prior norms: preservation, expertise, 
comprehensiveness, excellence and commemoration. In some cases, the emerging 
values build on older ones; in other cases, they seem to clash. In public 
discourse, these initiatives and controversies play out in the keys of policy 
and technology—but they have important cultural dimensions as well. Yet 
remarkably little critical attention has been given to the changing meanings of 
collections and collections data. This talk will present work in progress on a 
multi-site and multi-media ethnography of networked-age collections. As one of 
the most comprehensive and best-documented living collections of trees, shrubs 
and vines in the world, Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum plays an important, early 
role as an exploratory site for the broader initiative.



Biography:  Yanni Alexander Loukissas<http://yloukissas.com> is a Principal at 
metaLAB<http://metalab.harvard.edu/>, a project of the Berkman Center for 
Internet and Society<http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/> that explores digital 
futures for scholarship in the arts and humanities. He is also a Lecturer at 
the Harvard Graduate School of Design<http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/>. Originally 
trained as an architect at Cornell University, he subsequently received a 
Master of Science and a PhD in Design and Computation at MIT. He also completed 
postdoctoral work in the MIT Program in Science, Technology and Society. He is 
the author of Co-Designers: Cultures of Computer Simulation in Architecture 
(Routledge, 2012) and a contributor to Simulation and its Discontents (MIT 
Press, 2009). Before coming to Harvard, he also taught at Cornell, MIT and the 
School of the Museum of Fine Arts.



A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
Follow us on Facebook: STS@Harvard<http://www.facebook.com/HarvardSTS>




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