[RNLD] Endangered Language Digital Projects

Margaret Carew margaret.carew at batchelor.edu.au
Wed Feb 17 23:00:36 UTC 2016


Hi Blake

Have you seen First languages Australia's recently published guide to digital resources -

http://www.firstlanguages.org.au/projects/digital.html

Also

http://www.firstlanguages.org.au/projects/resources.htmlhttp://www.firstlanguages.org.au/projects/resources.html

and

http://www.firstlanguages.org.au/projects/mapping.html

And here are some articles that might be of interest

https://www.academia.edu/20677027/Making_an_online_dictionary_for_Central_Australian_sign_languages

https://www.academia.edu/19993052/Getting_in_Touch_Language_and_digital_inclusion_in_Australian_Indigenous_communitieshttps://www.academia.edu/19993052/Getting_in_Touch_Language_and_digital_inclusion_in_Australian_Indigenous_communities


cheers

Margaret Carew
Project Linguist, CALL
Division of Higher Education and Research
Batchelor Institute – Desert Peoples Centre Campus
tel: 08 8951 8344
email: margaret.carew at batchelor.edu.au<mailto:firstname.surname at batchelor.edu.au>| www.batchelor.edu.au<http://www.batchelor.edu.au/>
[cid:16C5211D-95E8-4825-9A6B-1A5F1F581B21]
2014 NT Training Awards – Winner, Training Provider of the Year
2014 NT Training Awards – Winner, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Student of the Year

________________________________
From: Blake Paul Kendall [blakekendall at hotmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, 18 February 2016 06:14
To: r-n-l-d
Subject: [RNLD] Endangered Language Digital Projects

Dear RNLDers,

I have a request to hear of some contemporary examples of Digital Endangered Languages Projects.

I have recently crossed over from the Linguistic field into Anthropology. Currently Berlin-based completing an MA in Visual and Media Anthropology. And for my current research I am focussing on Digital Cultures. This is obviously a detour from Linguistic Revival and Preservation projects, however as a long term goal, I am hoping to be able to establish this inter-disciplinary practise with the continued community-collaboration of resource and story-based projects. (As some will remember, such as 'Apo Uleu' - Eastern Penan Language Children's Book – Sarawak, Borneo 2014). Hopefully there will be an interesting development for the nature of our collective projects to see Visual Anthropology's methodologies applied.

For now I wanted to hear from the RNLD community about some digital resources / media tools that are currently being adopted.
I am interested in contemporary projects (already engaging community - post–pilot) that have been enabled through community participation. These can be Australian or Internationally based Linguistic Groups. This may be a smart-phone app, Facebook group, video-game, website etc – any digital-based medium.
One thing I am looking at is the relationship of a developed community, or an existing one and the impact of the digital format. Ideally these would have a participatory aspect that fosters 'sharing' and interaction between users (user-user [via tech] relation), rather than a educational resource (user-tech relation).

This could also be a great opportunity to have some outside research conducted about the structure of how individuals relate with such projects. All field work will be enacted through the digital space, and so is an aspect to consider about the nature of users.

If anyone has any projects that they themselves have been part of, or that you have heard of, I would greatly appreciate if you may share with me over the coming days.

I hope this finds you all well!

Cheers

--
Blake-Paul Kendall- Artist, Storyteller & Explorer
(Indigenous and Tribal Language Preservation and Revival)
TABLETOP STUDIO COLLECTIVE
+49) 016 341 9135
blakekendall at hotmail.com<mailto:blakekendall at hotmail.com>
(Berlin – Germany)




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