Narrare le connessioni invisibili dell'archeologia (original) (raw)
XII Convegno Internazionale DIAGNOSIS for the CONSERVATION and VALORIZATION of CULTURAL HERITAGE 9-10 Dicembre 2021, MANN - NAPOLI, ATTI DEL CONVEGNO, 2021
Abstract
ICT technologies play a strategic role in the communication and transmission of knowledge in the physical and digital dimensions of cultural spaces. Cultural heritage is a place of experiences, accessible to an increasingly demanding and segmented audience, aware of having an active and participatory role in the system of fruition, sharing and construction of knowledge. In this context, some interesting applications in museums and in archaeological sites have revealed the innovative potential of the relationship between archaeological research and narrative approaches through new digital media. Archaeology is using more innovative methods in the phases of excavation, cataloguing, study and diagnosis of contexts and artefacts, determining new possibilities of sharing and fruition of knowledge. The technologies applied to archaeology allow to document the entire process of excavation, to reconstruct the archaeological contexts, to store and query computerized data. Archaeological data are becoming more complex, as well as the descriptions more and more detailed. The sciences applied to archaeology play a fundamental role in the understanding of the biography of cultural objects: artifacts are analyzed in their materiality, formal aspects and relationships with the ancient context. In such scenario, this contribution reports a critical-analytical survey of the state of the art on the topic of archaeological research fruition. The review aims to define the applicative and innovative approaches for the enhanced and real-time storytelling of archaeological excavation through digital technologies. Making accessible the research phases of the archaeological excavation, results in enriching also the visitor experience. For this purpose, ICT technologies offer the possibility to transfer to the public the complexity of the interpretative process of archaeology, making accessible the “invisible knowledge”, the set of actions, gestures and activities that characterize the research field.
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