1,068 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2017
    1. These processes often leave the academic writer isolated. Writing in public counters this.

      I think the idea of removing the isolation found within writing for academic purposes very motivating. Quite often, people are afraid of sharing work that is unfinished or 'imperfect' . Digital history allows people to create a community, which facilitates collaboration and a greater ability to learn from and accept mistakes. In acknowledging the benefits of making writing public, Moravec shows the ways in which digital history can change the academic landscape.

    2. The commodification of ideas as currency in academia means that writing is often concealed until publication,

      This is a perspective i did not see at first. I always valued the outcome of works more than the research but realistically the research has a equal if not higher value then the outcome of a project itself. I say this because the research itself provides more evidence, more insight and paints the picture of how the project came to be.

    3. The commodification of ideas as currency in academia means that writing is often concealed until publication,

      This is closely related to Ian Milligan's point about historians rejecting open research because of the idea of "my research" is a commodity to them. Yet Moravec makes a good point. Seeing so many finished products, sparkling and flawless straight from the publisher, lessens the work that is put into academic writing. This might lead a historian to felling that they are inadequate because they have failures without seeing those of their peers.

    4. making visible the processes by which history making takes place. 

      I just took the mandatory Historical Theory class, and I found it absolutely fascinating. I think it's important for not just writers of history but also readers of history to know that history is constructed by historians, and our current idea of "good history" is just another development in a long line of historical standards. This kind of work might help, for example, high school teachers explain to their students that history is actually written by human beings with their own ideas, goals, and shortcomings.

    5. the women’s liberation movement of the 1970s and 1980s. I follow in the footsteps of other women who sought to erode the distinction between public and private to reveal the politics underneath.

      I appreciate this acknowledgement of the philosophical roots of open-access academic work. As discussed briefly by the authors of The Historian's Macroscope, DH as a field needs to promote diversity and be aware of its current shortcomings on that front. By framing her online work in the context of the feminist movement, Moravec makes an important statement: DH is not incompatible with diversity - it is the result of it.

    1. Imagine what this kind of source transparency could do if it became standard practice for historical journals.

      I think that having this sort of source transparency through online access could really change the way any scholar within the humanities operates. I opens up so many possibilities for gaining a greater understanding of research and methods used to reach a certain conclusion. I think it's really fascinating that digital humanities open up so many new possibilities to expand our definition of humanities.

    2. linked connection to secondary literature

      I can imagine the weight that would be lifted from a historians shoulder if this was a readily available feature. Especially for primary sources, from previous attempts at finding primary sources for my ancient greek classes, this would've been very helpful with the outcome and the time it took to do so.

    1. Paper Machines works with the individual researcher’s own hand-tailored collections of texts, whether mined from digital sources like newspapers and chat rooms or scanned and saved through optical character recognition (OCR) from paper sources like government archives. It can allow a class, a group of scholars, or scholars and activists together to collect and share archives of texts.

      Ladies and gentlemen, the future of history

    2. In an age threatened by information overload, we need a historical interpretation of the data that swarm over us

      This is very important, as there is an endless amount of information available online which makes it seem impossible to determine the data which is relevant.

    3. In our own time, many analysts are beginning to realise that in order to hold persuasive power, they need to condense big data in such a way that they can circulate among readers as a concise story that is easy to tell.

      It's so true that when presenting data/information, the reader MUST be considered. If it's too much content, or not understandable, it wont be retained.

    4. By placing government data about farms next to data on the weather, history allows us to see the interplay of material change with human experience, and how a changing climate has already been creating different sets of winners and losers over decades.

      This really highlights the importance of collaboration between the different fields.

    5. Applying Paper Machines to text corpora allows scholars to accumulate hypotheses about longue-durée patterns in the influence of ideas, individuals, and professional cohorts.

      For sure an important and useful step, for instance how we saw the impact of visualizing data helped Baker in the previous two texts in the readings for this week.

    6. If these revolutions are to pass, historians themselves will have to change as well.

      I think this is true of all varied sorts of scholars- the world is changing rapidly around us and if those who wish to study the world don't change with it, they may find themselves left behind as opposed to a part of the changes

    7. certainly change the functions of the university.

      It already has. By having so many things online, we are able to access information and learn and be inspired from others. A question to ask is, how much more will it change and effect our studies further.

    8. were feeling overwhelmed about their abilities to synthesise the past and peer into the future

      It's interesting to compare how people felt back in the 1500s to the 1800s to present day. With the explosion of art and knowledge, there was a sense of excitement. Than once we enter later on, and start expanding our knowledge in science. For example, if we were to also look at the age of Enlightenment, you had people having an eerie feeling, a sublime feeling if you will. This overwhelming feeling still exists but it seems a lot more of the norm now. No one is going to freak out if we discover an other new planet, just like no one is going to be confused how they made an iPhone smaller, it's almost as if its expected now. Just a random note, how people's opinions have changed over the course of the last 500 years in terms of the idea of overwhelming data.

    9. currently overwhelm the abilities of scholars

      Will this change how we research and write history? I seem to see historians working as individual specialists with perhaps a small group of researchers for support. Will history be written by larger inter-disciplinary teams who can deal with these huge amounts of available information?

    10. Paper Machines, a digital toolkit designed to help scholars parse the massive amounts of paper involved in any comprehensive, international look at the over-documented twentieth century.

      I appreciate how honest the author is about the "over-documented twentieth century" which I understand as addressing the explosion of texts and sources created by an expanding literate population and bureaucracies.

    11. Are we content, as historians, to leave the ostensible solutions to those crises in the hands of our colleagues in other academic departments? Or do we want to try to write good, honest history that would shake citizens, policy-makers, and the powerful out of their complacency, history that will, in Simon Schama’s words, ‘keep people awake at night’?

      I think this discussion on the purpose of history is far from over and that many historian's today shy away from using history as activism. In Historical Theory we touched on these ideas but I think that historian's (and history students) still romanticize the idea that their research alone will inspire others, rather than making an effort to collaborate with other academics in emerging activism efforts.

    12. possibility of choosing and curating multiple futures itself seems to disappear

      I have definitely seen this way of viewing history in a teleological way in my economics courses. It is even worse when discussing the inevitability of market forces acting in the world's future economy; this lack of flexibility is what makes me thankful for learning about historian's skepticism.

    13. Scepticism towards universal rules of preferment is one vital tool for thinking about the past and the future.

      This is really important for historians and something that I think Carleton could focus on more for first- and second-year history students! Instead of discussing "bias" it is skepticism that should be emphasized!

    14. We are no longer in the age of information overload; we are in an era when new tools and sources are beginning to sketch in the immense stretches of time that were previously passed over in silence.

      I disagree...I almost feel like we are in a "information toolItalic** overload" where there are so many ways to compile and access data that only those well-versed in technology can access updates to big data mining.

    15. By crowd-sourcing the rejection of requests for Freedom of Information Acts, Connelly’s Declassification Engine was able to show the decades-long silencing of the archives

      This is really smart; I've learned quite a bit about Canada's access to information laws while working for the federal government and have seen what information falls through the cracks.

    16. Digitally structured reading means giving more time to counterfactuals and suppressed voices

      I think this is a bit idealist...perhaps the history of our time can be categorized in this way but digitization of the past can only mine data from sources that were created at the time, and these are often created by powerful actors and institutions.

    17. a challenge that much longue-durée work has yet to take up

      I definitely agree that this is the problem with Braudel's longue duree...how can data over such a long period of time be consolidated in theories, theses and relevant historical questions?

    18. index, the encyclopaedia, and the bibliography – came from the first era of information overload, when societies were feeling overwhelmed about their abilities to synthesise the past and peer into the future

      This is really fascinating to me and makes for hopeful for new, exciting ways we can revolutionize data organization moving forward. I wonder in particular how bibliographies will evolve in the future, as we are already experiencing the issue of deleted online sources as new webpages replace the older ones.

    19. In our own time, many analysts are beginning to realise that in order to hold persuasive power, they need to condense big data in such a way that they can circulate among readers as a concise story that is easy to tell.

      The amount of information that is now online makes using digital data complex whether you are looking for something specific or looking to find something to specify (in terms of research). I think this statement certainly will prove true more and more as the internet gets saturated with data for every topic.

    1. They also draw upon a rich heritage of computational history, stretching back to early cutting-edge work done with censuses in the 1960s.

      Until I worked in a research library I didn't understand how important/useful censuses are! Beyond that, the digitization of them (at least from what I know of the Canadian ones) allows anyone with access to the internet to follow the movement and growth of families.

    2. It does so through a process of compression, by selectively reducing complexity until once-obscure patterns and relationships become clear.

      As an Anthropology student, this characterization of the macroscope made me think of the kind of work that socio-cultural anthropology attempts to do - take the chaos of the social world and unveil meaning from what, to the naked or untrained, eye might otherwise seem to lack any larger significance.

    3. A historian’s macroscope offers a complementary, but very different, path to knowledge. It allows you to begin with the complex and winnow it down until a narrative emerges from the cacophony of evidence

      It's a very interesting concept to consider. I had never thought about how historical patterns might not be obvious when viewed as a giant. Also, with the concept of macro scoping, does this mean that outliers from the pattern eventually are forgotten?

    4. This book is aimed at those historians who aspire to turn the macroscope on their own research, an increasingly important skill in our historical moment.

      Maybe I am interpreting this too literally, but I would add that the ability to conduct micro- and macro-level research is something that would benefit not only historians but also the majority of academics in the humanities and social sciences.

      For my undergraduate thesis project in Criminology, I struggled with deciding which methodology worked best with my dataset. Given the nature of my research, which involved looking at mass media constructions of the HIV/AIDS crisis throughout history, I ended up conducting a critical discourse analysis.

      Although I thoroughly enjoyed writing my thesis paper, I cannot help but wonder how much deeper my analysis could have been had I employed digital methods of research.

    5. A historian’s macroscope offers a complementary, but very different, path to knowledge

      Finding different places and techniques to gather more knowledge is something that I think we stop doing after a time which can end up being more harmful than trying to explore new ways to learn

    6. This is the goal of the macroscope: to highlight immediately what often requires careful thought and calculation, sometimes more than is possible for a single person

      Here is one of the main reasons why learning the methods of a digital historian is more important and relevant than ever.

    7. Microhistory involves the rigorous and in-depth study of a single story or moment in history, whereas macrohistory susses out long-term trends and eddies,

      Important to remember this distinction.

    8. good historians, like good detectives, test their merit through expansion: the ability to extract complex knowledge from the smallest crumbs of evidence that history has left behind.

      Interesting point that speaks to the need to search exhaustively for evidence in order to make a strong case. Instead of a detective, a good lawyer might also be a strong metaphor, in that the evidence he presents must be relevant and complete if he/she is to make a strong case.

    9. This is a good distinction from Fernard Braudel's distinction of timed period (longue, medium and short duree) for historical analysis that I studied last year.

    10. Macroscopes are not bound by time, but rather quantity.

      this is very simple, but is a very good way to help define macroscopes.

    11. As history becomes digitized in ever-increasing scales, historians without the ability to research both micro- and macroscopically may be in danger of becoming mired in evidence or lost in the noise.

      I have experienced this in other classes I've taken in history. This is one of the reasons why the title of this course got my attention.

    1. I am committed to building digital projects and public programs that reach wide audiences and empower individuals to be active participants in their communities.

      This here really shows her views on DH.

    1. ad I been asked two years ago if my project could have served as a prototype or guinea pig for the digital publishing initiative UMP is leading I would have been glad to help shape the development and design for authors producing narrative-driven digital publications.

      This goes to show how fresh the digital humanities really is. There are still so many obstacles and unknown areas of policy, and how to's out there. Progressive scholars are going to have to deal with these issues patiently.

    2. didn’t have a manuscript to ask reviewers to work with. A vestige, I suppose, of print workflows, my engagement of reviewers is always triggered by the arrival (even virtually) of the ‘complete manuscript.’

      I'm frustrated just reading this. It's interesting to me, as an undergraduate, to learn how much influence editors and established publishers have in the academic world. This kind of slow down, I imagine, must happen all the time.

    3. I examine particular moments of public dialog between the federal government and its citizens during the early twentieth century through commemorative stamp selection and production.

      Fascinating that she opened her study of public dialogues to a public dialogue (via WordPress comments). It goes to show that digital humanities methods are often revolutionary new ways of performing on a large scale and at a high speed the things that we've been doing for centuries (such as debating over stamps and history books).

    1. hypermediated

      With regards to future of digital humanities this will play an important roll in the progress DH will endure. (I believe that progress is going to happen as everything becomes mediated by technologies)

    2. What kinds of public support for our institutions might we be able to generate if we were to argue that public projects that promote the love of reading (or the love of art, or the love of history) exist in consonance with the work that we do in the classroom, or in the writing we do for one another, and that we should therefore take participation in such projects seriously?

      This is an exciting idea. It also reminds me of the discussions of how women's labour has been systematically denied over the centuries, and only recently have scholars and activists made it clear that "women's work" has always been unpaid labour. It's interesting that women have also been coded as more emotional than men, therefore more loving, therefore more willing to do unpaid work. Emotion, it seems, is often used to justify unpaid labour.

    3. That challenge is typified, perhaps, in our adviserly reactions to the graduate school admissions essay draft in which our student recalls with heartfelt sincerity the love of reading they have carried with them since childhood.

      As someone who will be writing admissions essays in the fall: duly noted.

    4. I want to suggest that it might be good for us as scholars to reclaim and recover the emotions for our more socially committed purposes, but I have to acknowledge the difficulties involved in doing so.

      I think this is an important and difficult discussion that will have to be had soon. The validation of various expressions and experiences of emotion is a central part of the push for diversity and social justice. If academia continues to pretend it is a perfectly objective space, diverse voices will continue to be silenced by claims that they are "overreacting" or "irrational".

    5. But critical humility, as you might guess, is neither selected for nor encouraged in the profession, and it is certainly not cultivated in grad school. Quite the opposite, at least in my experience: everything in the environment of, for example, the seminar room makes flirting with being wrong unthinkable

      This may be why "productive fails" aren't encouraged in other classes. At least, not explicitly. It may also have to do with the fact that failed products are rarely handed in, and most classes (and academic journals) deal with the finished product, not the process. Thus a digital environment is a great place to start encouraging productive failure and critical humility.

    6. Lisa Rhody has explored in a brilliant blog post on the applicability of improvisational comedy’s “rule of agreement” to academic life, adopting a mode of exchange that begins with yes rather than no

      I love "yes, and"! I did a lot of improv in high school, and this golden rule of improv is a memorable and appropriate way to describe how we should be approaching research. Whenever someone suggests something, you respond with "yes," and then you ADD something new to the scene. So an idea never gets completely shut down, it only gets continually improved over the course of the scene.

    7. owever much this internally-focused mode of critique has done to advance the field and its social commitments — and I will stipulate that it has done a lot — this form of engagement is too often illegible to the many readers around us, including students, parents, administrators, and policymakers.

      I never considered that self-criticism (within the field) was the root of this, but it makes sense. I've read some really whacky articles that made me question why I ever wanted to go to university. But I'm still here, continually upping the ante in my own papers, until I find myself writing about "conceptual bohemia as a female-coded body". There are other, clearer ways to express knowledge and data. Some scholars embrace them, yes, but sometimes the goal seems to be to get as complicated as possible. Perhaps digital history's new methodologies (such as visualizations and virtual reconstructions) may be one way to shift the focus of humanities scholars from critical complication to collaborative creation.

    8. studying literature or art or film might not be solely about the object itself, but instead about a way of engaging with the world: in the process one develops the ability to read and interpret what one sees and hears, the insight to understand the multiple layers of what is being communicated and why, and the capacity to put together for oneself an appropriate, thoughtful contribution

      This very eloquent passage sums up how I feel about the humanities. I love her emphasis on engagement and "appropriate, thoughtful contribution." I joke that I study English and History because I just want to read books all day. What I don't say is that reading books all day is my way of preparing myself to meet current and future challenges. Ideally, I am also preparing myself to pass on the experience I gain to future generations of readers. I study humanities for my own sake, yes, but also to discover what and how much I can give back to the world.

    9. I am primarily focused on the ways that we as professors and scholars communicate with a range of broader publics about our work.

      I find this discussion incredibly important. I considered, for a while, going into the Public History Masters at Carleton, because I want to make sure that as many people as possible have access to knowledge about the past. Then I realized that I didn't want to do Public History so much as I wanted to make History public. Just because historians are academics doesn't mean that their work can be divorced from public interest and criticism. I'm glad that digital historians are engaging with the newfound opportunities offered by the internet to publish findings more widely, and in more accessible formats (eg in semi-formal blog posts rather than dense academic articles - though both serve a purpose).

    1.  I try to publish open access as frequently as possible and share that work online.

      She takes pride in her work and really understands there are benefits that come from sharing the information she has collected.

    1. We’re relying on the data as it was submitted

      As milligan previously mentions, not all historians are willing to give their research out. So we are dealing with the information at hand; i can see this proving to bring difficulties and grey areas in research.

    2. French names were less likely to be found amongst the death rolls of the First World War

      This perhaps reflects the French resistence to the war effort in the First World War, resulting in low enlistment and thus fewer deaths.

    3. my sense is that we’re seeing the overrepresentation of Anglophones, recent English immigrants to Canada, who joined the CEF in the initial wave of optimism in 1915 and 1916, declining thereafter.

      What an interesting hypothesis. This serves as a good reminder that data is often best used when contextualized with other information - such as a knowledge of the social climate in Canada from 1915-1916.

    4. it’s not going to be perfect.

      Good point to remember with all data. Not only has the data been collected for a specific purpose, it has been collected within specific parameters that may not be ideal for a given project. That being said, I think these kinds of barriers push scholars to play with data in really creative ways, all while keeping them cognizant of the limitations of data.

    1. My primary research focus is on how historians can use web archives.

      He is clearly open to what it has to offer historians

    1. a medium with several built-in liabilities

      All mediums come with various affordances and disallowances - all new mediums challenge the old ones.

    2. enable historians to easily share information about our research as it happens.

      I think this has the potential to act as a review zone for researchers by fellow researchers. By seeing the direction of ones research another can suggest a different approach ect.

    3. “It’s true that one historian’s trash is another historian’s treasure. So, once I’m done with my treasure, I’ll share my trash for those who might want it.”

      This approach would be appropriate for authors who do not wish to share their work while it is in progress for fear there might be others who would take their ideas and publish them first. Thus the circle of people who would be open to open notebook history widens.

    4. The promise of open notebook history is the vast potential joy that could be ours if we chose to share our hoarded wealth.4

      Open notebook history also opens up the possibility for pet projects which publishers or universities hae rejected but the author still finds valuable and others may as well.

    5. “paranoid” lot, as William Germano has recently argued; our writing is often hampered by the paralyzing fear “that someone is always watching, eager to find fault.”

      I can agree with this argument. I think that most academic writers have enough pressure on them to keep them honest. Universities, peer-reveiwers, publishers, academics who read the work, there are countless levels of scruitiny on academic authors.

  2. www.trevorowens.org www.trevorowens.org
    1. “ability to think outside the professional norm.

      Though a professional from what i read here, he is clearly open to new things, that may become norms.

    1. encouraging researchers to share research data

      This paragraph is an excellent summary of the benefits and obligations of sharing data: more interdisciplinary use (contribution to the body of knowledge), reduction of redundancy in the collection of data (re-use it, don't re-collect it), transparency (how were conclusions formed, repeat-ability of results, what work did funds pay for?)

    1. something concerning social and household history in early Ottawa

      This is a big part of my summer project on domestic servants at Rideau Hall - finding out what the conditions of servants were like in the average Ottawa home at the time. I'm still a bit lost on how to find data for that project, so hopefully these exercises will be useful to me!

    1. Writing in this way liberates the author from the tool.

      markdown is straight forward to compose in, but I admit I am struggling with why it is an advantageous way to compose documents. It's easier for me to open a simple word processor and write, with the draft version of the document looking more pleasing to the eye than text with symbols. The .md format is nicely human readable and more future proof than Mictosoft's .docx format (or other proprietary formats), but a user could choose to save files in .md. A disadvantage of the format is the loss of meta-data that may be useful to future historians and present users and computers. A lot of information can be organized in tags and used adding richness to the document beyond the text.

    2. (here is a quick primer on markdown by Sarah Simpkin).

      I did this tutorial and tried to publish it into GitHub but unfortunately it wouldn't export.

    3. Git will open your text editor and prompt you to add a message

      This did not occur when I tried to merge a branch to my master of a clone of Bethany's repo. Did I do something wrong?

    4. DHBox returns a list of every command that you've typed.

      does every command line (such as the one on my own computer) do this?

    5. don't type the $, but rather, type the wget etc

      is there a way to copy & paste instead of typing all of this into the cmd, or does cmd not accept pasted commands?

    6. One solution is for all of us to use the same computer. The CUNY Graduate Centre has created a digital-humanities focused virtual computer for just such an occasion.

      Computer science people: help my humanities brain understand how this is possible. Am I sending commands to a computer machine at Carleton, which is then doing all its computations and sending me back the results? Or is it actually entirely virtual, with no physical computer running all the time? What is DHBox???

    1. 2 Rubric and Assessment Coursework: 65% Final Project: 20% Community: 15% All work indicated in each section of the workbook under ‘What you need to do each week’ has to be completed. All work has to be completed to a satisfactory level, per the criteria below. By the end of this course, you should be able to do the following: Understand how to use the idea of ‘the productive fail’ to use computing power effectively as an historian; Understand, plan, and employ concepts of computational reproducibility in the service of history Employ web tools to build history in public, collegially Weigh the evidence appropriately, understanding how it was created, in order to communicate the compelling story Understand the ways digital tools change us as we use them, to create compelling history that is self-reflexive These objectives map against the criteria for your coursework and final project grades like this:

      An important piece of the course to know and understand!

    2. fill in

      I suggest to watch the report form URL. If it is https://via.hypothes.is/https://goo.gl/forms/V201a2LUgiADg7GD3. I think that the "https://via.hypothes.is/" part of the URL confuses ReCAPTCHA, because ReCAPTCHA would not work unless I removed this part of the URL and reloaded the page. If you came to this page directly you may not be affected by this.

    3. Understand the ways digital tools change us as we use them, to create compelling history that is self-reflexive

      I am excited to learn more about how it does this!

    4. ‘the productive fail’

      An interesting read -- It's important for people to see the value in failure. Mistakes are instrumental for learning and personal growth.

    1. an ongoing series

      YESSSSSSSSSSSS. (This is convincing me to finally pick up A Midwife's Tale.)

    2. I would not have thought that the words “informed” or “hear” would cluster so strongly into the DEATH topic. But they do, and not only that, they do so more strongly within that topic than the words dead, expired, or departed.

      It's important to remember that these topics are constructed by the historian. They are, like all historical narratives, just interpretation. Another historian may not have labelled that topic "DEATH." I would like to see the same text topic-modelled with the same parameters by two separate historians, and see how similar their interpretations are.

    3. we see Martha more than double her use of EMOTION words between 1803 and 1804. What exactly was going on in her life at this time? Quite a bit. Her husband was imprisoned for debt and her son was indicted by a grand jury for fraud, causing a cascade effect on Martha’s own life – all of which Ulrich describes as “the family tumults of 1804-1805.” (285)

      This is like a damn commercial for MALLET. It's important, of course, to remain cautious about directly attributing the rise in "emotional" words to certain events and using that as evidence that MALLET can solve all our text-mining problems... that being said, this (along with the "cold weather" experiment earlier) is convincing, and something I would like to try in a text for myself. Comparing digital data with non-digital observations seems like a good way to check scholarship.

    4. this pattern bolsters the argument made by Ulrich in A Midwife’s Tale, in which she points out that the first half of the diary was “written when her family’s productive power was at its height.” (285)

      Again: incredible how digital history can be used in tandem with, and in addition to, existing scholarship. This article really helped me imagine what exactly digital methods could accomplish within the established field. We can go beyond what we ever thought possible; everything can be explored in new ways.

    5. receivd calld left

      Does MALLET count words that share a root together? I remember reading in the Macroscope's discussion of Father Busa that there are text-mining programs that do this, but does MALLET do it by default?

    6. I don’t pretend to have a firm grasp on the inner statistical/computational plumbing of how MALLET produces these topics

      I like that he acknowledges this important limitation in his work. Accordingly, he uses his results more as "soft digital history" as described by Baker: to direct his thinking rather than as evidence in and of itself.

    7. computational linguistics

      Anyone know of any good resources to learn more about this topic? I'm fascinated by the fact that computer code is a language akin to human languages. Both communicate information, but with different strengths and for different reasons.

    8. less effective at recognizing that “the Author of all my Mercies” should be counted as well

      A good reminder for any of us considering using primarily text-mining and other related methodologies for our final projects (or other projects).

    9. “The problem is not that the diary is trivial but that it introduces more stories than can be easily recovered and absorbed.” (25)

      Incredible that digital history is allowing us to improve upon pieces as seminal as A Midwife's Tale. It's fascinating that Ulrich uses "recovered" and "absorbed," two terms that describe almost perfectly what a machine is able to do with the diary that a single person cannot.

    1. There is no value added in going with the traditional model that was built on paper journals, with having people whose full time job was to deal with the journal, promote the journal and print the journal, and deal with librarians. All that can now be done essentially for free on the internet.”

      Unfortunately, academic journals, while they may be lagging severely behind other sectors in the digital revolution, are not the only products that should be more accessible due to digital technology. There's no reason an e-book should cost as much as a paperback, or a digital download of an album the same as a physical CD.

    2. In contrast to the exorbitant prices for access, the majority of academic journals are produced, reviewed, and edited on a volunteer basis by academics who take part in the tasks for tenure and promotion.

      Damn, academia. This is a serious problem: academics (used to) have no choice but to support for-profit journals if they want to advance in their careers, regardless of how good the service is. And, even as a student, I know the service isn't great: journals as frustrating to access, highly restrictive, and I've found some of the databases and especially the search systems to be unreliable and unsatisfactory.

    1. Other kinds of data - census data, for instance - were compelled: folks had to answer the questions, on pain of punishment. This is all to suggest that there is a moral dimension to what we do with big data in history.

      Fascinating. I would love to read more about this dilemma from a general philosophy (digital philosophy???) point of view. Of course, I've considered the ethics of history before, but the additional computational power of digital history (or, in the case of the census, the additional coercive power of the state) adds a new dimension to that question. Can we write good history with information the writers did not intend for us to know? Or is it the job of the historian to look beyond the text, and is computation just another tool to achieve that?

    2. Yahoo's closure of Geocities represented a terrible blow to social history.

      Moment of silence for all those animated .gifs.

    1. Please annotate their work with your observations and questions;

      It won't let me annotate on the sites?Not sure how to change this.

    2. maintain our scholarly voice online

      I'm very interested in this. I think this is one thing that humanities programs still don't prepare their students for. Whether or not we're using big data or computational methods, the fact is that more and more of our work as scholars is going to move online.

    1. I only ever intended to infer from the tables and graphs I produced, not least because as I created the data that I analysed, as I had abstracted spatial information from primary sources using a model I had developed, then I had put my own knowledge, understanding, prejudices, perspectives, and misconceptions into the data model.

      I like that Baker acknowledges how his own personal biases helped shape his data model, and that he does not attempt to apologize for it. That there was a high degree of subjectivity in Baker's research does not make his findings any less valuable.

      The nature of qualitative research is such that it must necessarily be informed by the researcher's own mental frameworks.

    2. not telling your reader everything you know is central to how we present interpretations of the past. The point is, I didn’t leave this digital stuff out because it was digital but rather because leaving stuff out is what we do in the process of turning research into publication.

      This is a good point which makes me rethink my previous position on how including this data would have made Baker's argument more persuasive.

      By choosing to only include information which would advance one of his arguments, Baker avoids bogging his reader down with superfluous details.

      His blog acts as a dynamic and live extension to his book; it is where he can give elaborate explanations of his analysis without having to fear he has lost the reader.

    3. But doing so runs into problems of selection and representativity. I’d be loath to say that any argument could be made from the satires that Isaac Cruikshank designed, but many differing and contradictory interpretations could be made depending on the hand curated corpus of prints that was chosen

      I'm not sure if this is relevant/comparable, but it kind of reminds me of an episode of Revisionist History I listened to a while back http://revisionisthistory.com/episodes/10-the-satire-paradox. I remember Gladwell talking about how the Colbert Report was interpreted differently by Republicans and Democrats and both groups liked and thought the satire presented supported their political beliefs. I wonder if any studies of historical satire have come across similar ambiguities and how possible it is to interpret the author's intended meaning?

    4. did not have free hands in the satires they designed, but rather they made designs that they thought were likely to appeal to the anticipated audiences of one or more prospective publishers

      I feel like even though we are decades ahead this is still something that authors/artists struggle with- their work has to be molded to fit what is currently in demand or they often find themselves unable to publish on a scale that will afford them recognition.

    5. not everything made it to the surface of the final product.

      In the same vein as my previous comment from this authors other post- over time a skill that you need to develop is to pick and choose which information is truly needed to be in your work.

    6. Network analysis is the ‘corpus level quantitative’ work.

      I am having trouble understanding what the author means by 'corpus level quantitative' work here. Can anyone explain?

    7. but rather they made designs that they thought were likely to appeal to the anticipated audiences of one or more prospective publishers.

      I like how he points this out. It's vital to think about your audience and not always solely on your work alone.

    8. History writing is concise, precise, and selective

      I agree with the author, you can't add everything to your finish product. You need the most important data that tells the most and I personally was taught never to REPEAT data ever. If two analysis I did were similar, I'd ditch the one that explained less.

    9. But doing so runs into problems of selection and representativity. I’d be loath to say that any argument could be made from the satires that Isaac Cruikshank designed, but many differing and contradictory interpretations could be made depending on the hand curated corpus of prints that was chosen.

      This is something I need to keep in mind when doing research and proves to be something to keep in mind when reading other works on the subject. The representativity and interpretation is very important to consider.

    10. Network visualisations

      I'd be curious if anyone had definition for this as I'm not quite following what this analysis is..

    1. these maps are not printed anywhere in the volume. Adding them just didn’t feel right because I don’t make an argument within them, rather my thinking

      Although I understand why Baker chose to omit these graphs from the published version of his book, I do not believe he made the right call.

      Given how formative he says that these visual representations were in the realization of his central argument, it would seem logical for him to include them in his book.

      I understand that the graphs merely represent his data in a visual form, but I would argue that this actually makes his analysis and interpretation more persuasive.

      If the visual representations of Baker's data assist the reader in following his thought process, this can only be a good thing.

    2. these maps are not printed anywhere in the volume

      The way in which data can be made into visualizations which help to organize and make clear patterns is very interesting to me. The fact that the visualizations are sometimes only used as a way of making sense of big data rather than as part of the argument, greatly appeals to me as I am someone who learns visually.

    3. It is on making and selling of satirical prints in Britain – mostly London – during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

      Very interesting subject; taken a look at such things as well in another History class regarding War and Europe from 1897 to 1914. Perfect primary sources for seeing the mores of the time and the opinion of the "common people"

    4. Adding them just didn’t feel right because I don’t make an argument within them,

      This is something I always have to pay attention to when writing- and it helps to know that "professionals" also have this same issue. Sometimes when researching, especially with history, I find I am able to gather a lot of information but am sometimes just regurgitating this information instead of making a point or adding to a point I was attempting to make

    5. they helped orientate and shape my thinking rather than provide ‘results’ that I analysed, interpreted, and/or presented in the book.

      Going off the idea that @angelachiesa mentioned in her annotation above, I can relate significantly to this point and believe that the process of doing something can make you grow as an individual. For me, doing research for an assignment is like a never ending game of connect the dots and most of it never ends up getting used. However, it still plays an important part in the process.

    6. What struck me when I made the latter – which, I should add, was made before the former – was that I could not see any patterns because the stationers dominated the visual field.

      This example gives me a good understanding of how one might use data digitally but I wonder in what other ways digital data can be used in addition to this.

    7. making visualisations of those abstractions

      I can also relate to Baker as well, because a good portion of my studies include researching a building or a site, and than making an abstract representation of this. Reading this article is making me look forward to some of the modules and doing these kind of graphs or something different.

    8. ‘soft’ digital/’digital’/Digital

      I can relate to this a lot as the process of doing something can make you grow as an individual. Sometimes you don't end up using some of the data you have collected or the graphs you've made for a project, but you were able to gain some sort of skill that can be used in the future.

    9. creating visual representations of data abstracted from business directories

      The author, Baker, used an interesting approach to represent the way in which different business categories congregated in different areas; as he points out later in the paragraph. By organizing each business category into coloured groups, the reader is able to differentiate where the majority of each business was located with respect to the Thames.

    10. I was accused of suppressing the digital, of providing a bad example that played into old habits and prejudices

      I agree with Baker suppressing these excellent maps from his book. History is about making an argument based on evidence. If the maps are not directly relevant to telling the history they do not really belong in the book, good editing would leave them out. The maps are important, and as @sarahmcole points out they are useful in a blog post like this, or a supplement to a book for those historians who want to delve into the methods the author used in research. Future researchers can also build on the author's work, repeat the experiments and perhaps get more conclusive outcomes. So, in fact it's important that work like this be published somewhere.

    11. Adding them just didn’t feel right because I don’t make an argument within them

      I still think that the author should have included some of these facts of "soft history" even though he does not think they contributed to his argument. His data on the changing meaning of the named job of "stationer," for example, is in my opinion important to present to the reader.

    1. blurring between visualization/sonification and sound art

      As I thought more about what digital and digitizing history is, it struck me how much of this medium relies on visual and sonification methods to communicate historical information. It's interesting this method changes perspectives on data communication, engaging with the past and forces history to keep up with technology.

    2. Self-reflection - they acknowledge and examine their own perspective vis-a-vis the past and understand (or try to understand) how that is having an impact on the story told.

      I think this is very important, as acknowledging and removing any biases one has makes it infinitely easier to see the truth of something.

    3. What was hard becomes easier (and at the same time, less examined at a theoretical level), the goal posts move, and the latest digital toy appears on the horizon.

      I really like that digital history, and digital humanities as a whole, is a discipline which is constantly evolving to reflect changing technologies and people's understandings of ways in which to approach the humanities.

    4. there is no recipe I can give you that will enable you to ‘do’ digital history.

      Knowing that there's no exact recipe for 'doing' digital history is very comforting to me, as it means I am able to define and practice digital history according to my own interests to create something meaningful to me.

    5. Maybe digital history is at the midway point on the continuum between art and science.

      I like this interpretation; it really demonstrates the past and the present coming together, and how different disciplines can be combined to create a whole that is able to enhance the two parts.

    1. Digital history does not offer direct truths, but only new ways of interpreting and understanding traces of the past.

      This is something important to remember, that the fact that the data is digital does not make it any different or truer that other data.

    2. A digital archaeology that sat within the digital humanities would worry less about that, and concentrate more on discovery and generation, of ‘interesting way[s] of thinking about this’. So too with digital history.

      I love this idea. So much of my time as a student has been spent seeking sources as justification for a particular (and established) historical argument- I hope learning about the field of digital history will help me explore the past in a way that allows me to question without having an answer already in mind.

    3. This reminds me of our discussion of micro-histories in Historical Theory. We read "The Return of Martin Guerre," which I think is a particularly good example of how history can be viewed as narrative storytelling and that the author of the historical piece and their background can greatly influence history's presentation.

    1. th an understanding of how the digital humanities have evolved,

      I find it very interesting that DH has evolved so quickly as technology evolves, and is continually evolving. It is neat to see a discipline which is always in motion in comparison to more static traditional humanities.

    2. digital does and has done to our understanding of the past and ourselves.

      What biases does DH introduce to history? I don't have a good answer to this yet, other than to see DH as an important method of inquiry, but not to over-rely on it to draw a conclusion.

    3. associated with quantitative studies.

      I admit that this is very much how I imagine computational history so I look forward to seeing how digital history goes beyond numerical data sets!

    1. THIS TEXT

      this is the most complicated thing I have ever done

    2. THIS TEXT

      I need to get into the habit of annotating.

    3. paradata?

      This link appears to be broken.

    4. Melissa

      Thanks for linking to Melissa's project. It's nice to get a feel for the kind of contents that other students have chosen to share in the past.

    5. THIS TEXT
    6. Go annotate something

      test

    7. and put in your own Hypothes.is username.

      I pasted the code into the page, but it was just displayed as text. In Wordpress I clicked the Text tab of the page editor and then highlighted the stuff I added and tagged it as "code" with the code button. It was marked up with <code> so I believe it's correct now. Follow up: That worked. Follow up 2: I was getting the "code" format of fixed width courier type font text leaking from my list of annotations over to the menu on the right side. An ugly hack of adding a second close </code> code tag at the end "fixed" the formatting. See example (<code>[hypothesis user = 'jeffblackadar']</code></code>) I don't like it but I thought I'd mention it.

    8. THIS TEXT

      Cool!

    9. write a post on your blog that poses the question 'what is digital history for me anyway?'
    10. THIS TEXT

      Handy tool!

    11. THIS TEXT

      Annotation complete!

    12. THIS TEXT

      This will definitely come in handy, I can easily see myself using this for all my future courses!

    13. THIS TEXT

      annotation

    14. THIS TEXT

      First annotation

    15. THIS TEXT

      First test annotation

    16. THIS TEXT

      I had a similar program on my computer for the past school year but this one seems much more user friendly!

    1. We must approach it with care, and not let it become the only lens through which we see the past.

      I think can go hand in hand with something that TIm Hitchcock wrote on his blog: Big Data for Dead People: Digital Readings and the Conundrums of Positivism. He said: "But, if you want something with a bit more flavour we need to move beyond what was deliberately coded to text – or photographs – and be more adventurous in what we are reading. "

    2. We wrote it in the open, inviting the world to contribute their edits, ideas, and advice for our final draft.

      Within all the readings we had this week, I am noticing the trend of collaboration and exactly how important it is to digital history.

    3. The Digital Humanities—and by inclusion, Digital History—cannot be a playground for the privileged. Letting it become so will undo decades of important work done in the humanities to listen for and amplify the voices of those who are too often ignored.

      This is very important, as history has been a playground for the privileged for so long. In fact, a lot of primary sources that were used for centuries were often from upper class members and/or high members of the military if we are talking about wars. Using primary sources such as satirical prints or writings of the "unprivileged" (please note the quotation marks as this could mean women in any class as well) gives us a better understanding of the people, their views on historical events and the mores of the time.

    4. more attention must be paid to diversity itself as a creative force for digital techniques.

      I feel that DH is facilitating diversity more than other more static non-digital disciplines, as the constant evolution of DH allows for greater collaboration and the ability to recognize faults within the discipline in order to change them. This is very refreshing, as the discipline is allowing itself to change for the better from the inside, rather than resisting the change.

    5. By inverting our relationship with our readers and their concerns, we tried to critically approach and deconstruct academic authority,

      I think this is really important, as removing any barriers makes it a lot easier for people to share ideas. I think this is especially important when it comes the barriers between academics in the digital humanities and non-digital humanities, as the disciplines could gain significant knowledge in working together.

    6. We wrote it in the open, inviting the world to contribute their edits, ideas, and advice for our final draft.

      I really like this idea and how it echos the way the internet is used - as a platform for people to be free in expressing their opinions and thoughts.

    7. Macroscope

      As someone new to Digital History, I am unfamiliar with this method. Could someone please explain this.

    8. Digital History—cannot be a playground for the privileged.

      Computers can be expensive and that expense represents a barrier. I`m going to try to access DHBox from my low cost Raspberry Pi computer and see how that goes. Some cloud computing providers like Microsoft Azure and IBM Bluemix offer a free tier of service (with limits), Maybe others. Having access to something like DHBox lowers barriers too.

    9. By not explicitly pointing out tools and approaches that embrace feminist values and diverse outlooks, we risk perpetuating incongruities, barriers, and biases in DH research

      This is a problem in any new frontier of academic research, and becomes more clear if Melissa Terras' blog post (footnote 1) is read! Academics must make substantive effort to open up their fields to include women and people of colour, not only out of human decency but also to tackle biases and break research barriers.

    10. Recent research on digital humanities practices opened our eyes to how gendered the topical landscape of DH still is, and to the significant barriers to diversity still present among digital humanists

      The mere recognizing of the barriers to diversity in the field is an important thing in it of itself. I feel like the open climate of digital history means that historians themselves are able to be held accountable for issues in diversity. With paper publication the pressure is on the publisher to be aware and catch such inequalities. With open research and open publication and living documents these things can be corrected quickly and by the author themselves. This practice not only holds the author accountable but also teaches historians ways in which they are able to encourage diversity and discourage marginalization on a first-hand basis, with interactions from groups that need better inclusion in the field.

  3. www.themacroscope.org www.themacroscope.org
    1. an original big data scholar, Father Busa and his Index Thomisticus

      I briefly learned about Father Busa this past year, he worked on the earliest computers to analyse the work of Thomas Aquinas.

    2. For us, big data is simply more data that you could conceivably read yourself in a reasonable amount of time – or, even more inclusively – information that requires or can be read with computational intervention to make new sense of it.

      This makes me wonder what we could attain in terms of examining big data, without modern technology. What trends would we see, and which ones would we miss? It really has impacted how we can interpret history, and how we can use these insights to look forward and predict other trends -- as the renown quote goes, "history repeats itself."

    3. Historians must be open to the digital turn, thanks to the astounding growth of digital sources and an increasing technical ability to process them on a mass scale.

      This day in age, this is necessary in order for a historian to produce full & complex research.

    4. I'm fascinated by the idea of quantifying historical facts and records into equally-weighted "data" that can be analysed. That is part of the reason I signed up for this course: to see how the analytical tools I have learned while studying history and economics can be turned on their head by computational methods. Does anyone have some examples of this translation from historical fact to numerical data?

    1. Do we have ethical responsibilities to website creators who may have had an expectation of privacy, or in the last had no sense that they were formally publishing their webpage in 1996?

      This debate over the ethics of archiving potentially sensitive--and yet public--personal blogs is fascinating to me.

      While I am sure that personal blogs have the potential to be instructive for future generations, it is likely that MySpace users did not have the same level of awareness regarding the permanence of the Internet as today's users of social media.

      I am more sympathetic to the side that wants to protect such personal records from being archived and publicly accessible; however, there are likely compelling arguments in favour of archiving this data that I am simply unaware of.

    2. There is a lot of it, however, and large methodologies will be needed to explore it. It is this problem that we believe makes the adoption of digital methodologies for history especially important.

      As history becomes increasingly digitized, I wonder if this will pose challenges for data retrieval, say 500 years from now. I agree with this because even though we may be able to access such a vast pool of knowledge, it may not necessarily be easy to sift out what is relevant or needed.

    3. As IBM noted in 2012, “90% of the data in the world today has been created in the last two years alone.”

      Wow, this is a surprising statistic.

    1. 1. Get quantitative and number your days. Preferably publicly.2. Find someone who doesn’t look and sound like you and mentor them, encourage them and invite them into your role.3. Have a clear, purposeful succession plan and enact it. 4. And above all – be more than binary – do this because you embrace diversity in all its complexity. Not because you have checklists or policies. But because you recognise that the real story of DH is more heterogenous and complex and vibrant than you have allowed it to be to date.

      These tips are should be applied to any and every discipline, not just DH. They are easy steps to follow to ensure that DH becomes diverse and allows for a greater range of ideas within the discipline.

    2. Global DH to be a celebration of diversity not the universalization of one perspective.

      In excluding all but one perspective, the discipline is effectively limiting itself when it comes to collaboration and the ability to evolve.

    3. How many of you have seen A woman on the main stage of this global DH conference?

      I really like that she outright addresses the issue, calling out the lack of diversity within DH.

    1. our “DH identity”

      Interesting that there is a "DH identity" collectively held by scholars within the discipline.

    2. Text analysis, visualization, literary studies, data mining, and archives take top billing.

      It's very interesting that these topics were focused on the most, as they are all topics which are taught in the intro digital humanities courses I've taken.

    3. below, shows the top author-chosen topic words of DH2015, as a proportion of the total presentations at the conference.

      This is an interesting break down of topics being discussed in DH, further showing the ways in which the discipline is lacking in certain areas of study.

    4. You won’t see a lot of presentations in other languages, or presentations focused on non-text sources. Gender studies is pretty much nonexistent.

      Further showing the need for diversity within DH, as less voices being included means less opportunity for collaborations and the ability to develop new avenues of research.

    1. ANNOTATE THIS PHRASE

      I have read and I agree to abide by the Code of Conduct.

    2. ANNOTATE THIS PHRASE

      I have read and I agree to abide by the Code of Conduct.

    1. developed a means to look at specific cases (e.g.. those pertaining to “poison”) and look for commonalities.

      What an incredibly useful research tool. Any legal research I have ever done has been on CanLii, QuickLaw and WestLaw. I never found any of these databases particularly user-friendly.

      I can see how there would have been a huge demand for this kind of tool.

    2. But they didn’t seem to have a good sense of how to yield quantitative data to answer questions,

      In a world that contains a myriad of data, it can be overwhelming and challenging to narrow it down by relevance. This is why I think open history and collaboration are so important, because scholars can work together and break down the task into more manageable parts. I believe that this will become more of a norm as technology and access to digital history content develops.

    3. As historians develop technical skills, and computer scientists develop humanistic skills, fruitful collaborative undertakings can develop

      Excellent point, collaboration between both is essential.

    4. and fall of cultural ideas and phenomena through targeted keyword and phrase searches and their frequency over time

      I would love to use the some of this information in the final project if thats possible!

    5. Université de Montréal are reconstructing the European population of Quebec in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, drawing heavily on parish registers.

      As someone who is particularly interested in immigration history, this seems like a wonderful project! I think that this type of data mining could be useful in other cities and could be used to show the general population the changing nationalities that have lived there.

    1. he concept of the distant reading of text, and that wonderful sense that millions of words can be consumed in a single gulp

      Distant reading is something I find really interesting, the few times I've encountered it I've found that the literary application to texts allows for a new understanding of the work to be seen.

    2. actually can change the character of how we ‘read’ a sentence, a word, a phrase, a genre – by giving a norm against which to compare it.

      Like others have expressed in annotations above, I find this whole example very interesting. I wasn't aware of the concept of distant reading before hand but will keep an active eye open for it now!

    3. and has the great advantage of not being ‘text’; or at least not being words.

      As an English major this hurts me a bit to say, but words/texts are not always the best way to go about research. Examining art and images or even examining the way words are written as opposed to the words and their meaning can produce as many insightful opinions and theories as reading

    4. This talk forms a quiet reflection on how the creation of new digital resources has changed the ways in which we read the past; and an attempt to worry at the substantial impact it is having on the project of the humanities and history more broadly

      One thing to consider when it comes to a these digital resources, is that could it also be hurting historical data? There are so many users online, so many people can be posting misinformation and different versions or photos of historical data. Having so many sources can alter the reality of history in a way. It is incredible how much access we have, but it has already interfered, with unreliable sources like Wikipedia.

    5. or in Lewis Mumfords words, ask questions we know that computers can answer.

      It's a danger only if the computer is over relied on. We do the same thing when we consult paper archives - we research certain questions the archives can help with, but don't expect to find out the kinds of things in an archive that oral history can tell us.

    6. But it was largely by starting from a picture, a face, a stair of fear, that the story emerged.

      I like how in this sentence the author clearly states that all the evidence above evolved from a single picture of a woman. It really emphasizes that digital history could have any starting point. This might be handy to remember for future research.

    7. In other words, Sarah’s case exemplifies the implementation of a new system of justice in which the state – the police and the court – took to themselves a new power to impose its will on the individual. And, it also exemplifies the difficulty that many people – both the poor and the old – must have had in knowing how to navigate that knew system.

      I think it is fascinating that this conclusion can be drawn from the data examined above. It puts into perspective the power of digital history.

    8. Its forms of textual criticism

      That history is in fact textual criticism is a fact which I believe is lost on most high school and many university students in their early years. Though the inclusion of primary sources is getting better in high schools, I for one had a teacher who taught us well how to find good and relevant primary sources, often these sources are simply presented to students with no explaination as to how to find them. The analysis on these sources is also wrapped up in a neat package for students that is easy to digest. They are not challenged to find something new in the text, to explore their own ideas. The digital humanities has been working so hard on digitizing so mnay of these primary sources. I feel these big data programs would be of great use in enaging younger students in primary source data and analysis thereof. Textual analysis is a valuable skill that serves people in any avenue they may persue after their secondary education. Big data and digital history I think would be an incredible way for them to be introduced to this kind of analysis.

    9. its engagement with memory and policy, literature and imagination, are ours to make and remake as seems most useful.

      History is in a way static, but the ways that we interpret it are dynamic.

    10. Projects like the Virtual St Paul's Cross, which allows you to ‘hear’ John Donne’s sermons from the 1620s, from different vantage points around the square, changes how we imagine them, and moves from ‘text’ to something much more complex, and powerful.

      That's such a neat medium in which to experience history. I think that presenting it in this way would captivate so many people. Those who may not otherwise be inclined to sit down and read about it may be drawn in to learn about it by other sensory means.

    11. We can do ‘distant reading’, and see this trial account in the context of 127 million words - or indeed the billions of words in Google Books; and we can do a close reading, seeing Sarah herself in her geographical and social context.

      This is a great example of looking at historical trends through a macroscope, while still being able to access microhistory. I think that one of the problems with using a macro approach is that in a way, it diminishes individual narratives which are relative to the individual and cannot always be generalized. I think it's great how this study takes both into consideration.

    12. In other words, the creation of new tools and bodies of data, have allowed us to 'read' this simple text and the underlying bureaucratic event that brought it into existence, and arguably some of the social experience of a single individual, in a series of new ways.

      I think that reach using these types of tools will allow for more subjects to be explored by historians in greater detail but also this may prove to be the begging of some change in what is expected in research (with all this available content).

    13. Projects like the Virtual St Paul's Cross, which allows you to ‘hear’ John Donne’s sermons from the 1620s, from different vantage points around the square, changes how we imagine them, and moves from ‘text’ to something much more complex, and powerful

      Similarly, radio has more power behind it then the television, the words alone carry more influence as the listeners are not distracted by the images. I think this carries over well into the idea that text is less powerful then speech.

    14. We know that she was a little uncertain about her age, and we know who lived up one flight of stairs, and down another. Almost randomly, we can now know an awful lot about most nineteenth century Londoners, allowing us to undertake a new kind of 'close reading'.

      This is what I would like to see with the use of big data. The ability to both show overall trends, yet also be able to follow micro history narratives and still value those narratives.

    15. The same could be done with the works of George Elliot or Tolstoy (who both wrote essentially ‘historical’ novels),

      As an avid consumer of historical novels this would be a really interesting project for me. Showing themes in this way, without even having to read the text sounds so efficient but might make academics in literature cringe.

    1. This definitional dilemma is not unique to DH

      Test annotation in Klein and Gold's Digital Humanities: The Expanded Field

    1. an academic guerrilla movement

      I love all the imagery this sentence produces

    1. From the privileged position of editor, I am acutely aware of how disciplinary, technical, and personal constraints have shaped this volume.

      I really admire when authors and editors acknowledge this because it really is a position that needs to be stated as a something that holds a bias.

    2. exclusionary cultures within DH

      I`m wondering if the "technical" aspect of DH gets linked with the type of hostile exclusivity that happens to women in some university engineering departments (per anecdotes related to me.) Seeing my daughter study programming in high school has shown her education in that course to be male dominated, I am not sure why this problem persists. I have worked with a lot of programmers who are women over the last 20 years or so (and hired or promoted some of them), but I have not yet been on an IT team that had gender parity, which is where we should be.

    1. As someone who deals with algorithms and large datasets, I desperately seek out those moments when really stupid algorithms wind up aligning with a research goal, rather than getting in the way of it.

      I'm not sure what make's a stupid algorithm if it works, I get the point that's made later but when another researcher tries to prove the point again it probably won't work in the same way and then they will have to reconsider accuracy.

    1. Of course, I said. Our community needs more venues to publish in, Digital Humanities has a commitment to open access, and having helped set up an online, peer reviewed, open access, Digital Humanities journal myself, I know how difficult it is to get any established scholars to support you in the early days.

      The internet has a lot of potential for the academic world and it can make researching a lot easier as people continue to use it for this type of thing.

    2. They werent asking me for a peer review. They were asking me to associate my name with the journal, so they could point to me.

      I was astonished and disgusted at the behaviour Melissa Terras was exposed to with this "Frontier journal." This article exposed a whole other side of online academic publishing that I did not know existed!

    3. I explain that systemic misogyny rarely is

      I feel like this "unintentional" sexism is so often what plauges female scholars. I have been blessed with some incredible female professors but have noticed some of this unplanned sexism in my own education. The core humanities classes are full year courses and are team taught by two professors for each year. This means there are eight professors. Currently, and for a considerable number of years to my understanding, only two out of these eight professors are women. This does not mean that the male professors are any less encouraging to female students or that they are sexist or marginalizing, but it is an issue. This sexism is I think increased by the fact that the academic field is so competitive. Diversity becomes less important than job security, and departments do not want to open positions to females only lest they be accused of denying other qualified male academics the security that comes with a permanent university appointment.

    4. When 46% of the 500+ attendees to DH2015 audience were women?

      I love this author's honest critique of the DH academic community and the sexism present. I was surprised at the number of female attendees at DH2015 and admit that I would have assumed a much smaller proportion of females in the community.

    1. It helps its members learn more about digital work in the Arts, Humanities, and Cultural Heritage sectors; it acts to foster collaboration and cooperation across regions and economies; it coordinates research on and in support of the use of technology in these areas across the globe; and it advocates for a global perspective on work in this sector. By sharing expertise, resources, experiences, and problems, we all become better practitioners of our common discipline.

      I think that this is an important goal, the internet is very prevalent in the lives of a lot of people so it is good to expand the academic potential it has.

    2. Cultural Heritage

      I am interested in what types of Cultural Heritage this includes, heritage buildings?