demystifying digital humanities fall workshop 1

15
What is DH, and why does it matter? Have you taken the DH Profile Quiz? http://tinyurl.com/dmdhquiz

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Slides from the first autumn 2014 DMDH workshop.

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Page 1: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

What is DH, and why does it matter?

Have you taken the DH Profile Quiz?http://tinyurl.com/dmdhquiz

Page 2: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Defining DH• By when it began (1946, approximately:

date of Roberto Busa’s plan for the Codex Thomisticus)

• Its stability, or lack thereof

• Its self-consciously mutable and multimodal nature

• According to its friction with traditional a.k.a. analog humanities

Page 3: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

What others say“...I like to say that digital humanities is just one method for doing humanistic

enquiry.”--Brian Croxall, Emory University

“A term of tactical convenience.”

--Matthew Kirschenbaum, U of Maryland

“I think digital humanities is an unfortunate neologism, largely because

the humanities itself is a problematic term.”

--Trevor Owens, Library of Congress

“I don’t. I’m sick of trying to define it. When forced to, I’ll make the referent the people instead of the ideas or methods -- Digital

Humanities is the thing practiced by people who self-identify as Digital

Humanists. It’s helpful to have a name for the field chiefly for institutional authority.

Though granted I think it does involve coding/making/building/doing things with computers, things related to, you know,

the humanities.”--Amanda French, Center for History and

New Media

Page 4: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Values behind DH

Page 5: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Goals: what we can do• Provide necessary background and

vocabulary via these workshops and the DMDH website.

• Make the digital humanities a safer, less intimidating, and more welcoming space for experimenting.

• Allow you to begin charting your own course, and developing your own projects.

• Build a DH cohort at UW.

Page 6: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Limits: what we can’t do

CAN BECOME A DIGITAL HUMANIST

Page 7: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

But don’t worry...

Page 8: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1
Page 9: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Websites for EvaluationOld Bailey Online : http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/

DHPoco - Rewriting Wikipedia Project : http://dhpoco.org/rewriting-wikipedia/

The Homer Multitext Project : http://www.homermultitext.org/

TranscribeBentham : http://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/transcribe-bentham/

UVic Maker Lab in the Humanities: http://maker.uvic.ca/

www.twitter.com/feministhulkwww.twitter.com/autoblake

http://tinyurl.com/fycchat2 and http://fycchat.blogspot.com

Page 10: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Website Evaluation QuestionsWhat do you see as the project teams’

priorities?

Which DH values do you see in operation?

What sort of usage (and user) is being posited?

What aspects (if any) aren’t working well?

Is there anything else that stands out, or raises questions for you?

Page 11: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Flash Project Development

Brainstorm a DH project with your team!(Students at Cabrini College brainstorm a DH project on porn. Image c/o Adeline Koh.)

Page 12: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Will it focus on one distinct topic? Or on bringing multiple topics together?

What artefacts will it contain, or collect?

How will users interact and/or contribute?

What forms (modes) will it take?

Flash Project Brainstorming

What perspectives do you want it to explore?

Page 13: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Resources for further training and collaboration

DMDH (http://www.dmdh.org)HASTAC (http://www.hastac.org)DHSI (http://www.dhsi.org)TEI Seminars at Brown University (http://www.wwp.brown.edu/outreach/seminars/)UW Libraries Workshops (http://www.washington.edu/lst/workshops)Profhacker (http://chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker/)

Online coding courses: Skillcrush (http://www.skillcrush.com) and Codecademy (http://www.codecademy.com), many others (just google!)Digital Humanities on Twitter -- no account needed (https://twitter.com/paigecmorgan/digital-humanities)

Page 14: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

With thanks to our sponsors...

Faculty sponsors: Tyler Fox, Ann Lally, Brian Reed, Miceal Vaughan, Stacy Waters, Helene Williams

Page 15: Demystifying Digital Humanities Fall Workshop 1

Works CitedThe quotes in the slide “What

others say” were taken from the essay “Day of DH,” in Debates in the Digital Humanities, edited by

Matthew K. Gold, and published by the University of Minnesota Press in

2012.

Thanks to Adeline Koh for permission to use the image in

Slide 11.