Volume 1 Issue 1
The pieces linked below will be included in the first issue of the open access Journal of Digital Humanities, and are open for peer review from February 14 through February 29.
We encourage you to read, view, and listen to these posts and provide your comments and critiques for the authors. The authors have been invited to engage with reader feedback in the comments or by modifying their piece before publication. Please consider your review comments as part of an ongoing conversation.
- Articles for Open Peer Review
- Demystifying Networks Parts 1 & 2 by Scott Weingart
Subscribe to Comments for this Post Part 1 of n: An Introduction A bunch of my recent posts have mentioned networks. Elijah Meeks not-so-subtly hinted that it might be a good idea to discuss some of the basics of networks on this blog, and I’m happy to oblige. He already introduced network visualizations on his own blog, and did a fantastic job of it, [...]
- Defining Data for Humanists: Text, Artifact, Information or Evidence? by Trevor Owens
Subscribe to Comments for this Post Fred and I got some fantastic comments on our Hermeneutics of Data and Historical Writing paper through the Writing History in the Digital Age open peer review. We are currently working on revising the manuscript. At this point I have worked on a range of book chapters and articles and I can say [...]
- Humanities in a Digital Age Symposium Podcast
Subscribe to Comments for this Post Institute of the Humanities and Global Cultures: Humanities in a Digital Age Symposium On November 11th, the University’s new Institute of the Humanities and Global Cultures hosted a daylong symposium on “The Humanities in a Digital Age.” The symposium included two panels—one on Access & Ownership and the other on Research [...]
- Spatializing Photographic Archives by Marc Downie and Paul Kaiser
Subscribe to Comments for this Post We’ve now completed an extensive and carefully illustrated White Paper for this NEH-sponsored project, a large pdf of which you may find here. (26.5mb). The White Paper describes the open-source software tool we’ve developed, and our reasons for wanting to forge a new approach to making digital tool for scholars. It also examines the [...]
- Philosophical Leadership Needed for the Future: Digital Humanities Scholars in Museums
Subscribe to Comments for this Post Editors Note: For the Museum Computer Network Conference in 2011 Neal Stimler, Associate Coordinator of Images at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, placed a call for a crowdsourced panel. Panelists submitted responses from an open call to the community of professionals in archives, libraries, museums and universities as they [...]
- Critical Discourse in the Digital Humanities by Fred Gibbs
Subscribe to Comments for this Post This post is a moderately revised version of a talk I gave as part of MITH’s Digital Dialogues series, titled “Criticism in the Digital Humanities.” The original audio and slides have been posted; this version has benefitted from the thoughtful questions and comments that followed my presentation. Many thanks to MITH for [...]
- Academic History Writing and its Disconnects by Tim Hitchcock
Subscribe to Comments for this Post This is the rough text of a short talk I am scheduled to deliver at a symposium on ‘Future Directions in Book History’ at Cambridge on the 24th of November 2011. I am on the programme as talking briefly about the ‘OldBailey Online and other resources’ (by which I [...]
- Clustering with Compression for the Historian by Chad Black
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- Demystifying Networks Parts 1 & 2 by Scott Weingart
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