Notes for Medium-Sized Data session

Notes from the Medium-Sized Data session are in a Google Doc: follow/share/contribute!

Categories: Data Mining, Session Notes, Teaching | Comments Off on Notes for Medium-Sized Data session

Lightweight Tools for Digitally Inflected Assignments

What lightweight digital tools can be incorporated into digitally inflected assignments in humanities courses? How can assignments ask students both to create using these tools and critique the affordances & constraints of these tools? Let’s roll up our sleeves and play with some of the following tools and imagine their use in a range of humanities courses:

  • Timeline JS for creating beautiful, interactive timelines.
  • StoryMap for telling stories with a spatial dimension.
  • SoundCite for inline audio citation.
  • Hypothesis, which makes it possible to annotate, critique, and takes notes on top of writing on the web.

Let’s play! Follow + share + contribute to our shared collaborative session notes.

Categories: Digital Literacy, Session Notes, Session Proposals, Session: Play, Session: Teach, Teaching | Comments Off on Lightweight Tools for Digitally Inflected Assignments

Preregistration now closed!

Crowd by Maia Valenzuela on Flicker used under a CC BY 2.0 license.

Crowd by Maia Valenzuela on Flicker used under a CC BY 2.0 license.

We’re thrilled to welcome so many people to Wake Forest for THATCamp Piedmont 2016! Pre-registration has now closed. You may still register in person on the morning of the event, but meals will not be included. We hope to see you there!

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50 Shades of Icebreakers

Let’s do this survey thing:  goo.gl/forms/AGMQ6DAzPJ.

–wpk

Categories: Session Proposals, Session: Play, Your Categories Are Inadequate | Comments Off on 50 Shades of Icebreakers

Publishing Makerspace

Publishing Makerspace is a publishing environment that is reconfigured as a place where all the components of a scholarly project — books and e-books, virtual and physical exhibits, visualizations, live performance and film — can be integrated using a collaborative process. This place enables the creation of a multimodal publishing environment that fully integrates digital content with manuscripts and ‘traditional’ scholarly content.   The goal is to create a multimodal publishing environment that fully integrates digital content with manuscripts and ‘traditional’ scholarly content.

It is important to note that Publishing Makerspace is not solely a digital project or approach. We are interested in crossing the analog-digital divide to recognize the ongoing interaction and interplay between the analog and the digital. The result, we hope, will be a more efficient, interoperable process of knowledge creation and production and an enhanced, more meaningful experience for multiple audiences.

Members of the Publishing Makerspace team will share a bare bones outline of the process and lead a discussion about the value of this model and its potential for expanding traditional publishing models to integrate DH work.  

Categories: Collaboration, Publishing, Session Proposals, Session: Talk | Comments Off on Publishing Makerspace

Building a Public Humanities Website: The 18th-Century Common

How can we communicate our scholarly work to a broader public?  In 2012 I co-founded a public humanities website — with the support of the Wake Forest Humanities Institute — that aims to do just that.  What are the payoffs and the pitfalls of this kind of public, digital project?  In this “Talk” session I will outline the history of The 18th-Century Common, “a public humanities website for enthusiasts of 18th-century studies.”  I’ll describe how the project dovetails with — and sometimes diverges from — institutional goals and priorities.  I’ll discuss challenges in generating public-oriented scholarly contributions.  In particular, I’ll focus on our recent addition of the WordPress tool “Press Forward,” which we hope will facilitate additional contributions from scholars to the site.  This THATCamp session will generate conversation beyond The 18th-Century Common to the topics of public engagement with scholarly work, institutional support for public humanities, and the use of Press Forward.

Categories: Blogging, Collaboration, Publishing, Session Proposals, Session: Talk | Comments Off on Building a Public Humanities Website: The 18th-Century Common

Interplay Between Archival Materials and (Digital) Humanities

As an archivist, I approach the digital humanities specifically with an eye towards how to position my work and outputs so that they can be used by researchers, scholars, students, and other interested communities. But there’s a lot to unravel in those considerations. Some questions to bat around in this session include

  • Technical aspects: What sorts of files or information would be useful for archival repositories to provide? How can we make our (digital or analog) materials more discoverable and accessible to all? What technical skills should we cultivate to be useful to our humanities colleagues? How can we document the digital works of scholars that are being created?
  • Historical realities: How do we all work around the silences of archival records? What can we do about all the materials that remain minimally available or completely unavailable due to limited archival labor?
  • Systemic issues: How do technologies like Wikipedia (which adheres to notability guidelines and lacks diversity but also less restrictive than many institutions, allows widespread access to information, and benefits from edit-a-thons) expand or restrict access to scholarship? What institutional policies do we have that restrict additions to collections, access, use, and even future research? How can we, individually and institutionally, work together to define “notable” and collect “important” materials while not overly burdening collecting institutions such as libraries, archives, and museums (LAM)?
Categories: Archives, Collaboration, Session Proposals, Session: Talk | Comments Off on Interplay Between Archival Materials and (Digital) Humanities

Copyright: Confusion? Concern? Comprehension!

Confused about copyright, either generally or specifically with your project? Do you have concerns about fair use or author rights? Do you think you comprehend the basics (or, better yet, the nuances), but aren’t 100%? Join a conversation about copyright, bringing your questions, experiences, triumphs, and frustrations to the table, without judgement or fear (psst, I’m not the copyright police!).

Categories: Copyright, Session Proposals, Session: Talk | Comments Off on Copyright: Confusion? Concern? Comprehension!

Publishing THATCamp Piedmont 2016 Proceedings

Talk proposal: I would like to, well, talk (see what I did there?) about publishing the results of this very THATCamp. Then again, I always want to talk about  publishing, so there’s that. Still, methinks we should thinking about properly rendering the manifestations of our THATCamp discussions into some sort of consumable/distributable yet permanent monograph (and maybe not as just a minigraph (kids today, with their hippety-hop music and FaceSpace pages)). So, yes, I’d like to discuss the very distinct possibility of creating a literally handy piece of ad hoc technology — the kind which really needs no batteries, or power cords, or software updates — in a format with a very intuitive user interface, and very few bugs (apart from the real kind perhaps), and which will last a very, very, very long time (especially once librarians get their hands on it). I’m talking about books, people. Are you picking up what I’m puttin’ down?

Categories: Publishing, Session Proposals, Session: Talk | Comments Off on Publishing THATCamp Piedmont 2016 Proceedings