Museology Panel Explored Digital Heritage at the Annual Conference of Estonian Humanities

NEWS and BLOG

Comment

From 8–10 April, the Annual Conference of Estonian Humanities brought together nearly 600 scholars and featured more than 300 presentations. The museology working group organised a special panel titled “What Does the Digital Heritage User Need? What Happens to Heritage After Digitisation?”, moderated by Pille Runnel.

The presentations explored digital cultural heritage as a dynamic and sometimes tension‑filled field where user expectations, technological possibilities, institutional constraints, and cultural and ethical considerations intersect.

Presentations

  • “Dear friend, it is ugly and inconvenient, but you can sometimes get things out of it.”
    Greete Veesalu | National Library of Estonia

  • How Does Digital Cultural Heritage Speak to Us?
    Mart Alaru | Estonian National Museum

  • Youth Culture Meets Digital Heritage
    Pille Pruulmann‑Vengerfeldt | Malmö University | Estonian National Museum
    Pille Runnel | Estonian National Museum
    Maria Murumaa‑Mengel | University of Tartu

  • Digital Heritage Without Limits? Layers, Purposes and Ethical Dilemmas of Digitisation
    Jaanika Vider | Tallinn University
    Tiina Vint | University of Tartu Museum

  • Digital Heritage as a New Mode of Interpreting Museum Collections
    Pille Runnel | Estonian National Museum

  • Dialogue with AI in the Digital Archive: On the Possibility of Complex Meaning‑Making
    Merit Maran | Tallinn University

  • What Shapes Digital Development in Museums? Four Pressure Points of Digital Transformation
    Agnes Aljas | Estonian National Museum

Poster presentations

  • Digital Heritage and Video Games: Opportunities for Collaboration and User‑Centred Approaches
    Piibe Nõmm | Estonian National Museum
    Agnes Aljas | Estonian National Museum

  • Digital Cultural Heritage as a Societal Resource
    Piibe Nõmm | Estonian National Museum

  • Incubating Innovation: How Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums (GLAM) in Estonia Can Shape the Future of Digital Humanities
    Mahendra Mahey | Tallinn University, Estonian National Museum, University of Strathclyde

Photo: Alar Madisson

Add a comment

Email again: