The Silver Age in the digital realm. Towards trans-disciplinarity and Smart culture

Main Article Content

Dolores Romero López

The main objective of this research is to rethink traditional historiographical principles to demonstrate the possibilities of reconstructing literary historiography with digital resources. The methodology used is derived from the massive digitization of the contents of libraries and institutional archives and their metadata, which offer specific information about digitized objects. The first results of the research are presented with a twofold purpose. Firstly, the production, use, diffusion and storage of national and international digital resources related to the rereading of the Silver Age. Secondly, some ideas from transdisciplinarity are set out to rebuild this period under historiographical parameters. The conclusions are derived from the digital history approach, which allows a new interpretation framework based on the principles of trans and smart culture.

Keywords
Spanish literature of the Silver Age, digital history, transdisciplinarity, smart culture

Article Details

How to Cite
Romero López, Dolores. “The Silver Age in the digital realm. Towards trans-disciplinarity and Smart culture”. Artnodes, no. 22, doi:10.7238/a.v0i22.3215.
Author Biography

Dolores Romero López, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Dolores Romero López holds a Doctorate in Hispanic Philology from the University of Salamanca. After securing a post-doctoral scholarship from the Ministry of Education and Science, she moved to the University of Nottingham, in the United Kingdom, where she completed a Ph D in Literary Theory and Comparative Literature. Since 2002, she has been working at the Complutense University of Madrid, where she is currently a tenured lecturer in the Hispanic Literature and Bibliography Department. She is the author of numerous articles in specialised journals of national and international impact. Worthy of note among her books on comparative literature are the following: Orientaciones en literatura comparada (Madrid: Arco Libros, 1998) and Naciones literarias (Barcelona: Anthropos, 2006). In the setting of women's literature, she has edited Seis siglos de poesía española escrita por mujeres (Berne: Peter Lang, 2006) and Retratos de mujeres traductoras (Madrid: Escolar y Mayo, 2016). As a specialist in Spanish literature from 1868-1936, she has published: La tópica de la poesía modernista: Teoría y Praxis (1900-1907) (Salamanca: University of Salamanca, 1993), Una relectura del fin de siglo en el marco de la literatura comparada (Berne: Peter Lang, 1998) and Los márgenes de la Modernidad: Temas y creadores raros y olvidados de la Edad de Plata (Seville: Punto Rojo Libros, 2014). Additionally, within the field of the study of Digital Humanities, other noteworthy works include Literatures in the Digital Age: Theory and Praxis (Newcastle, Cambridge Scholar Printing, 2007), Literaturas del texto al hipermedia (Barcelona: Anthropos, 2008) and El universo mágico de Edith Nesbit de la editorial Calleja a la edición interactiva (Seville: Renacimiento, 2018). She is currently the director of the Research Group “The other Silver Age: cultural projection and digital legacy” at the Complutense University of Madrid. She has been the lead researcher on two projects: “Electronic Desktops for Literatures-2”, and “eLITE: Electronic Literary Publishing”.

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