Dr. Nicole Basaraba
Assistant Professor, School Office Language Lit & Cult Stud
Email N.BASARABA@tcd.ie Phone https://orcid.org/my-orcid?orcid=0000-0003-1753-9160Biography
Nicole Basaraba (BA, MA, PhD, PGCertHE) joined the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultural Studies and Centre for Digital Humanities at Trinity College Dublin in 2023 as an Assistant Professor in Digital Humanities. Before joining TCD, she taught media and communications studies at Coventry University, where she also continued her research in the area of digital narratives for cultural heritage, with a focus on dark tourism. Prior to that, Dr. Basaraba completed postdoctoral research at Maastricht University (The Netherlands) and was a visiting researcher at the Centre for Contemporary and Digital History at the University of Luxembourg (Luxembourg). She received her BA and MA from the University of Alberta (Canada), and completed her PhD, which was funded by the ADAPT Centre, at Trinity College Dublin. She completed a Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice in Higher Education (PGCertHE) in 2023. In addition to her academic background, Nicole has nearly a decade of professional international experience in digital communications/PR and project management primarily in higher education, but also within non-profits, government, and a marketing firm. As a transdisciplinary researcher, her research focuses on how interactive digital narratives (IDN) - an umbrella term to encompass various formats of digital storytelling - can increase interest in cultural heritage through slow tourism, public history projects, and can allow for evolving interpretations as well as public participation in narrative co-creation. She has participated in a number of different research projects that involve partners from different sectors including cultural heritage institutions and corporate partners. Past case studies for her research include an interactive web documentary for UNESCO World Heritage Australian Convict Sites, a mobile app for The National Famine Way (Ireland), a policy brief related to the European Capitals of Culture Initiative, and paranormal investigations as a form of virtual dark tourism on YouTube. Her first monograph, Transmedia for Cultural Heritage: Remixing History was published by Routledge in 2021, and she has published over 20 publications, including peer-reviewed journal articles, conference papers, book chapters, as well as a variety of public-impact pieces (e.g., a policy brief, academic blog post, public radio shows, research events published on YouTube, and manual related to good practices towards citational justice for minority groups).
Publications and Further Research Outputs
- Basaraba, Nicole, Conlan, Owen, Edmond, Jennifer & Arnds, Peter, Digital Narrative Conventions in Heritage Trail Mobile Apps, New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia, 25, (1-2), 2019, p1 - 30Journal Article, 2019, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole, Wolves at the Door: Migration, Dehumanization, Rewilding the World by Peter Arnds, 2021, p225Review Article, 2021
- Basaraba, Nicole, Co-constructing Cultural Heritage Through a Web-Based Interactive Digital Narrative, International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling, Lasertherapie der Haut, 2018, pp642--645Conference Paper, 2018
- Michelle Doran, Nicole Basaraba, Jennifer Edmond, Vicky Garnett, Courtney Helen Grile, Eliza Papaki, and Erzsébeth Toth-Czifra, Scholarly Primitives of Scholarly Meetings: A DH-Inspired Exploration of the Virtual Incunabular in the Time of COVID 19, Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ), 2022Journal Article, 2022, URL
- , User Testing Persuasive Interactive Web Documentaries: An Empirical Study, Springer LNCS Springer Conference Proceedings, Bournemouth, UK, November 3"6, 2020, edited by Anne-Gwenn Bosser, David E. Millard, Charlie Hargood , 12497, Springer LNCS, 2020, pp83"91Conference Paper, 2020, DOI
- Nicole Basaraba, Peter Arnds, Jennifer Edmondand Owen Conlan. , New Media Ecology and Theoretical Foundations for Nonfiction Digital Narrative Creative Practice., Narrative, 29, (3), 2021Journal Article, 2021, DOI
- Nicole Basaraba, Cross-comparing the Concept of United in Diversity as Expressed by European Capitals of Culture, Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, 2022, p1--22Journal Article, 2022, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole, A Framework for Creative Teams of Non-fiction Interactive Digital Narratives, 2018, p143--148Journal Article, 2018, DOI
- Nicole Basaraba, A bottom-up method for remixing narratives for virtual heritage experiences, Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies, 2022Journal Article, 2022, DOI
- A Data-Driven Approach to Public-Focused Digital Narratives for Cultural Heritage in, 2022, pp337--356 , [Nicole Basaraba, Nicole Basaraba, Jennifer Edmond, Owen Conlan, Peter Arnds]Book Chapter, 2022, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole, Transmedia Narratives for Cultural Heritage, 2022Book, 2022
- Basaraba, Nicole and Cauvin, Thomas, Public history and transmedia storytelling for conflicting narratives, Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, 27, (2), 2023, p221 - 247Journal Article, 2023, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole, The rise of paranormal investigations as virtual dark tourism onYouTube, Journal of Heritage Tourism, 2023, p1 - 23Journal Article, 2023, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole , The emergence of creative and digital place-making: A scoping review across disciplines, New Media & Society, 25, (6), 2021, p1470 - 1497Journal Article, 2021, DOI
- Basaraba, Nicole, Creating Persuasive Book Trailers as a New Media Marketing Tool, Logos: Journal of the World Publishing Community, 27, (3), 2016, p34 - 51Journal Article, 2016
- Basaraba, Nicole, A communication model for non-fiction interactive digital narratives: A study of cultural heritage website, Frontiers of Narrative Studies, 4, (1), 2018, ps48 - s75Journal Article, 2018
- Basaraba, Beyond Creating Collections: A Scoping Review of 3D Heritage Storytelling, Digital Humanities in the Nordic and Baltic Countries 8th Conference, Reykjavik, Iceland, 27-31 May 2024, 2024Conference Paper, 2024, TARA - Full Text
- Digital place-making through narratives of hybrid cultural heritage in Europe in, editor(s)Laura Popa and Roeland Goorts , Cultural Identities in a Global World: Reframing Cultural Hybridity, Giessen, Germany, Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2024, pp257 - 272, [Nicole Basaraba]Book Chapter, 2024, URL
- Basaraba, Nicole, A Framework for Creative Teams of Non-fiction Interactive Digital Narrative, Interactive Storytelling: 11th International Conference on Interactive Digital Storytelling, Dublin, Ireland, 4-7 December 2018, edited by H. Koenitz, M. Haahr, R. Rouse , Lecture Notes in Computer Science: Springer., 2018, pp143 - 148Conference Paper, 2018
- Basaraba, Nicole, Policy Brief: How Can the European Capitals of Culture Cities Balance the United in Diversity Concept?, 2022, -Miscellaneous, 2022
- Basaraba, Nicole, Embracing `virtual dark tourism' could help heritage sites at risk of degradation, The Conversation, 2024, -Miscellaneous
- Australian Broadcasting Company - All in the Mind, 'Dark tourism + selfie sticks = moral outrage', ABC Radio National, 2024, -Broadcast
- Scott Rhettberg, 'Dark Tourism with Nicole Basaraba', Off Center Podcast, University of Bergen, Norway, 2024, -Broadcast
- TLRHub, 'Werewolves, Vampires and Ghosts: Supernatural stories across time', 2024, -Broadcast
- CBC News Edmonton, Hauntings at home: A Q&A with researcher of virtual dark tourism, 2023, -Miscellaneous
- CBC Edmonton., '[Radio Interview]. Dark tourism.', 2023, -Broadcast
Research Expertise
Dr. Basaraba's research domain focuses on analysing and developing best practices for creating interactive and transmedia narratives for cultural heritage sites. Her interests are in non-fiction narratives, but most specifically in cultural heritage, slow and dark tourism, and public history projects with a global context (i.e., cross border and multinational narratives). She examines how participatory digital cultures and globalisation impact and influence digital narrative productions for cultural heritage tourists (both local visitors and international visitors). Her current and future research covers challenges, such as the increasing production of cross-media tourism content and digital experiences; the democratisation of multiple perspectives on cultural heritage sites and historical events; issues with mass tourism in the preservation of cultural heritage sites; and examining how cultural heritage institutions (CHIs), researchers across disciplines, and creative professionals are experimenting with digital storytelling. She has previously explored different narrative genres including interactive web documentaries, digital history exhibitions, mobile applications, and more recently VR and AR experiences. Her research has included case studies on the concepts of 'digital place-making' and 'creative place-making'; multi-perspective interactive digital narratives for the transportation of British, Irish and other convicts to Australia; the Irish Famine; European Capitals of Culture Initiative; and virtual dark tourism on YouTube, among others. Her research interests include: non-fiction digital narratives (e.g., interactive, transmedia, serious games); digital humanities; rhetoric / persuasion; narratology; cultural heritage; dark tourism and slow tourism; participatory digital cultures; public history.
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TitleCOST Action CA22159 - National, International and Transnational Histories of Healthcare, 1850-2000 (EuroHealthHist)Summaryhe current state of the art in the history of healthcare suggests an ongoing divide in terms of themes, approaches, methods and even sources between historians working in different parts of Europe. This reflects separate research cultures and networks shaped by long term approaches to the history of medicine including, the role of medic-historians, the social sciences, social and cultural history and even politics. This Action will address this challenge through scientific exchange around four research themes " Healthcare Provision, Healthcare Providers, Patients, and Finance " that will feed into the capacity building objectives. These thematic working groups will integrate and finesse diverse methods and approaches and extend knowledge and understanding of experience and sources currently in use across Europe. Through training events, skills exchange and publications the project will create critical mass in the history of European healthcare, providing support and an academic environment for scholars at all stages of their career. It will facilitate the establishment of a platform for their work that seeks to temper the dominance of Anglophone publication and presentation opportunities; create core groups across the continent to exchange ideas and produce collective outputs; enhance opportunities for research students and early career researchers to experience diverse academic cultures and approaches; and institute collegiate mentoring structures that will reduce hierarchies dominated by seniority and promote fair and equal opportunities irrespective of race, gender, age or class. The core methodological approach we will use will be comparative history.Funding AgencyEuropean Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST)Date From28/09/2023Date To27/09/2027
History, Heritage and Archaeology, Communication and media studies, Languages and literature, Other Humanities,
Recognition
- DARIAH-IE present
- Fellow of Advance HE present
- Association for Research in Digital Interactive Narratives (ARDIN) present
- Digital Humanities in the Nordic and Baltic Countries present
- Electronic Literature Organisation present
- International Conference on Entertainment Computing Programme Committee 2024 (peer reviewer) 11/02/2024
- External PhD Advisor for Akinboboye Alonge, Coventry University, UK. Thesis topic is - "Mediating Chaplaincy: The Online Mediation of Multi-Faith University Chaplaincy in the Immediate Post-COVID19 Pandemic Period 2020 to 2022" 01/10/2022