Periodic Reporting for period 1 - TECHNET (Technological innovation and knowledge networks: a multidisciplinary approach to Greco-Roman stone vases)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2020-09-08 al 2022-09-07
Written dissemination (currently in full phase of elaboration due to Covid-19 delaying project’s results): 4 articles in international peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings in both Gold and Green Open Access; one on OPEN RESEARCH EUROPE platform; the full catalogue of vases and two essays in full Open Access on Technet’s official website; uploading Green Open Access pubblications onto the Universities de Catalunya RECERCAT free repository in compliance with OpenAIRE-EU.
Oral dissemination: 3 presentations at EAA 2021, TRAC 2022, ASMOSIA 2022 conferences; for the local scientific community: 2 seminars at ICAC (Oct 2020) and URV (Feb 2022); 1 lecture at Interdisciplinary Seminar Propter Marmora (Dec 2021); 1 lecture for the CERCA research network - Interdisciplinary MA course (Dec 2022); for the wider scientific community: 2 lectures at international workshops, one at URV (Jan 2022) and one at the University of Barcelona (Feb 2022), 1 at the international workshop at URV in Tarragona (Nov 2022). For the local/regional/international public outreach: talk at Tarragona Radio program Toquem Pedra (Oct 2020); talk at Women in Roman Society (Oct 2022) at the University of Girona; lecture at a secondary school and a podcast for the European Researchers Night (Nov 2020); lecture at Barcelona Fiesta de la Ciencia (28-29 May 2022); talk at the Soprintendenza di Roma in collaboration with Italian TV and press (Dec 2022). Data will be accessible according to FAIR policy via free repository CORA - Portal de la Recerca (PRC).
- gender and material culture production
- technology and craft-interaction
- landscape and artisans’ mobility
- Reflectance Transformation Imaging (RTI) applied to stone artefacts.
TECHNET promotes awareness of these objects in both the academic community and the wider public. Generating interest in these objects fosters collaborative opportunities with institutions for a revision of their history and biographies, from their consumption in antiquity to their reception in modern societies to re-discover cultural identity and heritage. The project’s has potential socio-economic implications in creating links between researchers, the wider public and modern artisans, who can share their knowledge and skills as part of cultural and cognitive experiences in modern as in ancient stone working. Such an appeal helps traditional crafts like stone-working to survive in the modern world and to endure, while projecting their significance into the future.