Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Exploring the Vilnius Ghetto

“How people perished in the Ghetto – that I understand; what I cannot understand is how they lived.” — Chaim Grade. reVilna is a digital mapping project dedicated to understanding how the residents of the Ghetto lived, how the ghetto functioned — even, given the circumstances, flourished — how it emerged, and how, ultimately, it was […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: PressForward Beta Plugin Now Available

The PressForward Plugin is a tool for aggregating and curating content from the web from within a WordPress dashboard. It is designed to support bloggers and editorial teams who wish to aggregate and share content from a variety of sources. The plugin provides an RSS reader within the WordPress dashboard, a tool for collaborative editorial work, and a process […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: What Can Digital Humanities Do for 19th-Century Literature? The Case of William Black

This is part of a longer book project I coauthored with Jason Whittaker called William Blake and the Digital Humanities: Collaboration, Participation, and Social Media. I wanted to look at Blake as a test case for understanding how digital modalities can impact what literary studies means to us. In other words, I wanted to think about the […]

Editors' Choice

Editors Choice: Historians and Digital History: Why Do Academics Shy Away from Digital History?

The Internet is finally beginning to penetrate historical practice.  At the recent North American Society for Sports History (NASSH) Conference, held May 24-26, 2013 at Saint Mary’s University, Douglas Booth and Gary Osmond provided a fascinating primer on the impact digital history is starting to exert on a field like the study of international sports […]

Editors' Choice

Editor’s Choice: Why Can’t You Just Build it and Leave it Alone?

(This post is based on “Improving Software Sustainability: Lessons Learned from Profiles in Science“, an interactive paper (pdf) at the Society for Imaging Science and Technology’s Archiving 2013 conference, April 2-5, 2013.) This story begins in the early 1990s at the National Library of Medicine, when our group experimented with arranging, describing and digitizing historical manuscript collections to make […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Topic Modeling for JDH

Topic modeling is a catchall term for a group of computational techniques that, at a very high level, find patterns of co-occurrence in data (broadly conceived). In many cases, but not always, the data in question are words. More specifically, the frequency of words in documents. In natural language processing this is often called a […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Thoughts on feminism, digital humanities and women’s history

The digital age and the tools it provides allow for a different mediation of knowledge than standard forms of scholarly communications. As noted by Abby Smith Rumsey these new methods have brought “fundamental operational changes and epistemological challenges [that] generate new possibilities for analysis, presentation, and reach into new audiences”.[2] The exhibit format in Omeka […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: The Poetics of Non-Consumptive Reading

“Non-consumptive research” is the term digital humanities scholars use to describe the large-scale analysis of a texts—say topic modeling millions of books or data-mining tens of thousands of court cases. In non-consumptive research, a text is not read by a scholar so much as it is processed by a machine. The phrase frequently appears in […]