AUGMENTED REALITY IN HUMANITIES: TEACHING BOOK HISTORY IN THE DIGITAL AGE

Author(s):  
Polly Mukanova
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Del Giudice ◽  
Daniela De Luca ◽  
Anna Osello

Author(s):  
Guichun Jun

The combination of COVID-19 and the Fourth Industrial Revolution has brought an unprecedented new normal, which has affected all aspects of human life, including religious activities. As a consequence, church mission and different ministries have found themselves more dependent on media. Furthermore, the convergent digital technology continually develops augmented reality and virtual reality, in which churches are planted and continue to carry out their mission and ministries. Although virtual reality churches are new mission frontiers in the digital age, there are several theological issues from the conventional perspective of church ministry and mission. This paper aims to address the controversial theological issues and reflect on them from an ecclesiological perspective to explore a theological possibility to overcome the issues and to justify their mission and ministries in virtual reality.


Author(s):  
Henrike Manuwald

Book history, understood broadly as the analysis of written communication, interacts with legal studies in two main areas: first, legal rules frame the production and dissemination of books or written documents (in many cultures); second, books and written documents can act as meaningful objects within the legal sphere. This chapter focuses on the second area and shows by way of examples how taking the materiality of the book as a starting point can help to uncover cultural structures linked to the law. The chapter demonstrates the potential of this approach by focusing on a period in which books with legal contents radically changed their function: the Middle Ages in Europe, with their shift from writing down customs in the vernacular as a means of preservation to actual law books used as works of reference. As can be shown, the design of legal manuscripts played an important role in this process of codification. But not only law books are elements of the legal sphere: the chapter also outlines the function of books in legal rituals with religious implications as well as the merging of “law” and “literature” in some medieval manuscripts. Finally, the chapter draws attention to the opportunities book history offers for research into intercultural relations and into the change of legal culture in the digital age.


ASHA Leader ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 14-14 ◽  
Keyword(s):  

Amp Up Your Treatment With Augmented Reality


2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
eve Coste-Maniere ◽  
Louai Adhami ◽  
Fabien Mourgues ◽  
Alain Carpentier

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