Scattered Links – 3/16/2009
I’ve been closely following the history blogging roundtable examining Judith Bennett’s History Matters: Patriarchy and the Challenge of Feminism. Notorious Ph.D., Girl Scholar kicked things off with...
View ArticlePlaying Well With Others
One of the sharper distinctions between the digital humanities and traditional scholars is an acceptance and emphasis on collaboration. Lisa Spiro has written several convincing posts that detail how...
View ArticleThe Launch of Tooling Up
Today marks the public launch of a project called Humanities 3.0: Tooling Up for Digital Humanities. Over the past several months I’ve been working on Tooling Up at the Bill Lane Center for the...
View ArticleKobe Bryant and the Digital Humanities
What does one of the most successful and polarizing basketball players in history have to do with the digital humanities? For those that don’t follow the NBA, Kobe Bryant is famous for a host of...
View ArticleCoding a Middle Ground: ImageGrid
Openness is the sacred cow of the digital humanities. Making data publicly available, writing open-source code, or publishing in open-access journals are not just ideals, but often the very glue that...
View ArticleLearning by Doing: Labs and Pedagogy in the Digital Humanities
The digital humanities adore labs. Labs both symbolize and enable many of the field’s overarching themes: interdisciplinary teamwork, making/building, and the computing process itself. Labs give...
View ArticleAda Lovelace Day 2013
October 15th marks Ada Lovelace Day, an annual celebration of the achievements of women in science, technology, engineering and maths. As I read through posts commemorating the day, it got me...
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