Skip to main content

Home/ ENGL 481: Digital Humanities/ Group items tagged change

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Megan Lightsey

Internet Geeks and Freaks - 2 views

opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/19/internet-geeks-and-freaks/

mlightsey disco change free

Karissa Lienemann

Literature is not Data: Against Digital Humanities - 0 views

  •  
    Beginning with the explanation of how algorithms have changed technology in many different aspects, this article discusses how Digital Humanities came to be. Also, the "resistance" of literature to data can affect the use of algorithims and why it is seemingly not always accurate. The article also talks about the start of turning literature into data and why the digitization of books is going to be important. The idea of having a completely accessable, professionally reviewed, open access library is any scholars dream. The unlimited access to any written work would change the way people research. Although there are still some changes that need to be done with the algorithims, digital humanities is a huge developmental project.
aearhart

What do Digital Humanities and American Studies Have in Common? - 2 views

  •  
    In this article, Susan Garfinkel compares the changes and shifts in American Studies to those in Digital Humanities. As a grad student at the University of Pennsylvania, Garfinkel was able to gain a first hand account of how an ever changing diverse program can evaporate. The changes then witnessed in American Studies can now be seen in Digital Humanities. Both concentrations are growing and hopefully by incorporating each with the other they will continue.
Matt Barrow

Want to Change Academic Publishing? Just Say No - 0 views

  •  
    This article discusses the economic nature of publishing from the viewpoint of an author and editor of the works of others. The author explains the legitimacy of publishing companies' practices in the past, but calls into question those of modern for-profit publishers. He rejects the current model, in which his readers would pay more for a day's use of his article than for either of his books, and supports a billable-hours system like that of lawyers or psychiatrists.
Esther Ok

Pre-Sprawl Aerial Images: 'The Next Best Thing to a Time Machine' - 0 views

  •  
    Journalist Emily Badger reports of the Map and Geographic Information Center, a project collaborated between Trinity College and University of Connecticut Libraries exploring the geographic changes Conneticut. Images have been collected and stitched together that allows users to see the drastic changes to the U.S.'s geography, such as the Interstate Highway System before and after World War II. These Aerial images they share reveal surprising facets of urbanization.
Megan Lightsey

Digital Keys for Unlocking the Humanities' Riches - 2 views

Digital humanists are arguing that it is time to set our focus on how technology is changing liberal arts. Civil War battlefields are being mapped. Animation, charts and primary documents are being...

mlightsey surprise map NEH NSF

Megan Lightsey

A Day in the Life of a Digital Humanities Postdoc - 2 views

A typical day as a digital humanist includes a variety of things such as time spent researching, experimentations with teaching, and changing the face of research. Liminality of people in the digit...

mlightsey digitalhumanist research experimentation

Megan Lightsey

The Death of the Book - 7 views

The book is dead. It is a heavy physical object that is not doing well to keep up with the changing times. The death of the book is thanks in part to the birth of the internet. E-books on sites lik...

mlightsey book death ebooks kindle

John Salem

CFP: "Migration, Mobility and Movements: Crossing Borders in World History" (Northeaste... - 1 views

  •  
    This brief presentation on the Fifth Annual Graduate Student Conference on World History gives an example of some of the things the field of History is looking to track and how the field is expecting to change. The conference is requesting papers on the topics of cultural mobility, political movements, and networks utilized for the transmission of ideas. More of interest to digital humanists though is the category of Mapping Movements, with an explicit focus on the new technologies and digital humanist methods being developed that can be utilized to assist this process.
kcoats

DPLA and Europeana Collaborate - 1 views

  •  
    This brief news article from 2011 highlights an agreement between the Digital Public Libraries of America and Europeana to code their systems in such a way as to be interoperable and similar to each other. This change allows the two databases to be readily accessed and aggregated by the user, to "have access to the combined riches... at a single click." One of the major projects arising from this collaboration was a virtual exhibition about the migration of Europeans to America.
Michelle Calhoun

Participatory Play: Digital Games From Spacewar! to virtual peace - 0 views

  •  
    This forum on digital gaming raises some controversial questions in regards to the gaming world in our culture today. It points out the "serious addictions" and "aggressive tendencies" that most digital games possess today and raises the question, "Could it change?" Would a gaming system that introduces "virtual Peace" catch on in the mainstream gaming culture, or only pool in the more "university study" sites that seek to introduce it? Could a spark catch in peaceful gaming that instead of violence incorporates UNICEF or Red Cross into the virtual gaming world?
klooney27

Earn a Digital Humanities Degree - 0 views

  •  
    This link leads to Marylhurst University Online Digital Humanities Degree. I thought this was worth noting because it is actually an English and Digital Humanities degree that is being offered. I've looked at a few local colleges near our Texas A&M, and very few universities offer Digital Humanities as a main degree and not a minor or extra field of study. This is worth looking into because the universities need to start offering this degree since it is making so many changes to the way we view the humanities.
John Salem

The Challenges of Digital Scholarship - 1 views

  •  
    The core purpose of this article is the promotion of the digital humanities in academia by informing digital humanists how they might be able to better communicate the value of digital humanities. The four main points are: educate the general audience about the subject matter, the need for reviewers to understand the diverse nature of the field, documentating ones role in collaborative projects for the sake of promotion, and explaining the changing nature of peer review in the field. It also briefly addresses the need for institutions to accept new forms of media.
John Salem

Getting Your Digital Work to Count - 0 views

  •  
    This brief article highlights a major change in the Digital Humanities that occurred in 2012, an MLA release containing standardized guidelines for evaluating work in the Digital Humanities. Those who stand the most to gain from this release are the DH professors themselves, as the guidelines lay some basic ground rules for evaluating this material for the purposes of promotion or gaining tenure. Although the guidelines are non-enforceable, being that they are from the MLA they are likely to be given some weight.
Matt Barrow

HathiTrust Orphan Works Project Grows as University of California, Others Join Up - 1 views

  •  
    Another early announcement of the HathiTrust's Orphan Works initiative, this article discusses the pros and cons of the project, and the potential changes that it may bring. The author speculates on possible benefits while pointing to the important decisions that will have to be made regarding copyrights.
Esther Ok

American Heritage Vegetables - 0 views

  •  
    This website is for the American Heritage Vegetable project, a digital humanities program dedicated to documenting the cultivation practices and cookery of vegetables in the American kitchen. It also shares what kind of vegetables are in the market during different time periods. The information is collected from sources such as agricultural journals, gardening encyclopedias, and even horticultural manuals. With the American Heritage Vegetables project people can learn how we eat, what we eat, and the way American cuisine has changed throughout history.
Esther Ok

Food Genius Builds Netflix for Foodies by Digitizing The Dish - 0 views

  •  
    In this article Danielle Gould interviews Justin Massa, the CEO and cofounder of Food Genius, an application which displays and analyzes dishes for users. Each dish in a restaurant is posted with a picture detailed with information such as ingredients used and cooking methods in order to make a more accurate suggestion for users. The goal of Food Genius is to pre-load data as much as possible and to change the way food recommendations are made.
aearhart

The Digital Humanities « Gerry Canavan - 0 views

  •  
    Video series "At the Intersection" focuses on the use of big data by large companies, such as popular car companies. Land Rovers has accomplished many awards within only one year greatly due to the use of digital humanities. The old tactics of constructing a new car would be through physical examples such as clay models. With the use of virtual processing, designers could compare nine to eleven designs and examine specific problems. They invented a high computing ecosystem in order to generate over ten terabytes a day and store all their data. All these decisions was a huge change for their company and as a result they were able to create more options for better results in their products.
aearhart

Editors' Choice: Digital Humanities in Educational Institutions Round-up : Digital Huma... - 3 views

  •  
    Alan Lu and William G thomass III are humanities chairs with a long involvement in digital issues who have experienced budget cuts in regards to digital technologies, which are driving changes in higher education. They believe humanities faculty members, chairs, and adminstrators right now have a choice. This choice consist of taking no systematic action on the digital humanites front, and to let the long term digital future build for them. The other option is for humanities faculty, chairs, and adminstrators to plan how to intergrate the digital humanities systematically throughout the different departments.
aearhart

Tri-Co Initiative Bringing Humanities into 21st Century | Daily Gazette - 0 views

  •  
    This news article outlines the ideas of Tri-Co professors who are setting out to change the way that the world and general public views the humanities. To do so, they have set up a new initiative, founded by Bryn Mawr English Professor Katherine Rowe in 2010, called the Tri-Co Digital Humanities (TCDH). TCDH will support independent fellowships and give grants to students, faculty, and staff for humanities-based inquiry and using new technology.
1 - 20 of 21 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page