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André de Avillez

» Data Curation as Publishing for the Digital Humanities Journal of Digital H... - 0 views

  • the mechanisms of publishing come to stand in for the larger and more complex processes of creating, vetting, and circulating knowledge
  • if we examine the work that humanists are doing—in something like the way that scholars in the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS) have done for science—by looking at their culture of material practices, then the familiar framework of “publishing” does not serve us well
  • to publish this scholarship requires that we add some new dimensions to our ideas of “publishing.”
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  • I want to suggest that the theory and practice of data curation can augment our notion of “publishing” in a way that will serve the needs of the digital humanities community
  • Data-curation-as-publishing is publishing work that draws directly on the unique skills of librarians and aligns directly with library missions and values in ways that other kinds of publishing endeavors may not.
  • Treating data curation and publishing as kindred services may offer the prospect of expanding a library’s stable of “innovative” offerings while not straining resources because there are management efficiencies in having both the “front end” and “back end” people in the library. However, in this model, neither libraries nor publishing seems truly transformed and this is a problematic mismatch when so many other aspects of scholarly work are being transformed.
  • In referring to “data curation,” I am speaking specifically of information work that integrates closely with the disciplinary practices and needs of researchers in order to “maintain digital information that is produced in the course of research in a manner that preserves its meaning and usefulness as a potential input for further research.”
  • Kathleen Fitzpatrick has argued that humanists “might … find our values shifting away from a sole focus on the production of unique, original new arguments and texts to consider instead curation as a valid form of scholarly activity” (Fitzpatrick 79)
  • It is also increasingly common to see the release of open data sets as enticement to attract digital humanists to work on particular sets of questions,
  • Publishers add value to end products through peer review and high quality production and presentation. Libraries standardize and preserve these outputs and continue to make them available to a community over time. Organizations which comprise both library and publisher can imagine this as a unified suite of services that cover the entire data lifecycle.
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    Article on JDH on data curation, by Trecor Muñoz. Focused on data-curation by libraries, but I thought it might be interesting given the curation side of the PPJ
André de Avillez

Exploring the Significance of Digital Humanities for Philosophy | Digital Scholarship i... - 1 views

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    interesting post on the role of DH for philosophy (early mention of PPJ)
Chris Long

Do 'the Risky Thing' in Digital Humanities - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Educa... - 2 views

  • "Make sure that someone's got your back, but do the risky thing."
  • Sidonie Smith, is leading an investigation of future forms of the dissertation, and whose Committee on Information Technology is working on issues surrounding the review of digital scholarship for tenure and promotion.
  • Real innovation requires risk
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  • Getting her work out of the pile is helped enormously by having done something more than what was expected
  • You must support her in doing the risky thing. Insist that she defend her experimental work, and then, in turn, defend her choice to anyone who doesn't understand her deviation from the road ordinarily traveled.
  • Scholars doing digital work require kinds of support that many more traditionally oriented humanists do not: access to technical resources for both their teaching and scholarship, as well as help maintaining those resources.
  • we run the risk of breaking the innovative spirit that we've hoped to bring to our departments
  • And where that spirit isn't broken, untenured digital scholars run the risk of burnout from having to produce twice as much—traditional scholarship and digital projects—as their counterparts do
Kris Klotz

The Digital Humanities - 2 views

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    This is a google doc of blogs and other sites curated through PressForward by DH Now.
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    I also posted this in our Behind the Scenes community page. I'm going to begin working through it manually to find sites that are relevant for us.
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    Great find! I'll start working through it as well. I'll work from the bottom up.
Chris Long

Community and Communication | Kris Klotz - 1 views

shared by Chris Long on 19 May 14 - No Cached
  • Dewey’s task, then, was to articulate the means by which the public can discover and identify itself, “so that genuinely shared interest in the consequences of interdependent activities may inform desire and effort and thereby direct action.”
  • Communication of the results of social inquiry is the same thing as the formation of public opinion.
    • Chris Long
       
      Here I wonder if we can link to Habermas and the movement from Leserwelt to public.
  • freedom from government-sanctioned doctrinal constraints; and freedom to pursue the truth wherever it might lead in making a contribution to the world of learning.
    • Chris Long
       
      Refer to this in my section on Kant as not giving up his private rights in writing on the enlightenment.
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  • While Dewey agrees with Lippmann
    • Chris Long
       
      I'd like to hear more about the Lippmann argument here. Just a few sentences.
  • In this case, philosophers must be considered not as faculty members but as fellow citizens
  • If so, how does a philosophical community balance the opportunities for communication made possible by growing interest in the digital humanities with the need for active local communities?
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