1. Sharing deep history as digital knowledge: An ontology of the Sq’éwlets website project
- Author
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Johnny Williams, David M. Schaepe, Colin Pennier, Reginald Phillips, Aynur Kadir, Kate Hennessy, Clifford Hall, Kyle McIntosh, Andrew N. Phillips, Alicia Point, Reese Muntean, John Williams, Clarence Pennier, Betty Charlie, Lucille Hall, John R. Welch, Natasha Lyons, Joseph Chapman, Michael Blake, and Vi Pennier
- Subjects
Bibliographic Ontology ,World Wide Web ,Archeology ,060101 anthropology ,060102 archaeology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Deep history ,Relation (database) ,Computer science ,0601 history and archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Ontology (information science) - Abstract
Ontology is the philosophical study of the nature of being, becoming, existence, and relation. This paper presents an ontology of the Sq’éwlets Virtual Museum of Canada Website Project, a project that has focused on creating a digital community biography of the Sq’éwlets First Nation ( www.digitalsqewlets.ca ). Based on several decades of community archaeology and the recent production of short video documentaries, the website presents a long-term perspective of what it means to be a Sq’éwlets person and community member today. We explore how this project came to focus on the nature of being Sq’éwlets; how community members conceived the nature, structure, and nomenclature of the website; and how this Sq’éwlets being-ness is translated for outside audiences. We suggest what lessons this approach has for anthropological conventions of naming and knowing as they relate to Indigenous histories, and consider how archaeological knowledge can be transformed into a digital platform within a community-based process.
- Published
- 2016
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