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  1. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2012)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2012)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 24.08.2012 - 14:00

  2. Building the Infrastructural Layer: Reading Data Visualization in the Digital Humanities

    Information visualization is a technique for organizing, representing, and interpreting information visually. Information visualizations can take the form of hand-drawn diagrams, popular “infographics,” or interactive, computer-based visualizations. We see examples of information visualizations produced and displayed in myriad contexts, including: the scientific modeling of the Higgs boson particle, the NY Times 2012 presidential election coverage, the popular infographics exhibited at Visual.ly, corporate PowerPoint presentations, public web galleries like Nathan Yau’s Flowing Data or Manuel Lima’s Visual Complexity, Google’s Ngram Viewer, and finally, in humanities research and pedagogy. Examples in the digital humanities include the Stanford Literary Lab’s use of the Gephi visualization platform to map its own academic community, the Software Studies Initiative’s visualization of thousands of cultural media objects like magazines, manga pages, and paintings, as well as Alan Liu’s Research-oriented Social Environment (RoSE) project that incorporates visualization tools directly into the research process.

    Scott Rettberg - 09.01.2013 - 00:47

  3. Friending The Humanities Knowledge Base: Exploring Bibliography as Social Network in Rose

    WHITE PAPER FOR THE NEH OFFICE OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES:
    ROSE DIGITAL HUMANITIES START-UP GRANT (LEVEL 2) HD-51433-11
    (9/1/2011 TO 9/30/2012)

    Alan Liu, Rama Hoetzlein, Rita Raley, Ivana Anjelkovic, Salman Bakht, Joshua Dickinson, Michael Hetrick, Andrew Kalaidjian, Eric Nebeker, Dana Solomon, and Lindsay Thomas

    Scott Rettberg - 09.01.2013 - 01:05

  4. Thoughts on a Literary Lab

    For the “Theories and Practices of the Literary Lab” roundtable at MLA yesterday, panelists were asked to speak for 5 minutes about their vision of a literary lab. Matthew Jockers spoke on the conception and agenda of the Stanford Literary Lab, which he started with Franco Moretti.

    Scott Rettberg - 17.01.2013 - 21:04

  5. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, UiB, Fall 2013)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, UiB, Fall 2013)

    Patricia Tomaszek - 18.01.2013 - 11:50

  6. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Spring 2015)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Spring 2015)

    Alvaro Seica - 21.01.2015 - 15:25

  7. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2016)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2016)

    Alvaro Seica - 01.06.2016 - 11:43

  8. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2017)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2017)

    Alvaro Seica - 24.08.2017 - 11:52

  9. The Aesthetics of Feminist Digital Archiving in the Suffrage Postcard Project

    In 2019, we have Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. A hundred years earlier, there were postcards. In the “Golden Age” of postcards (1902-1915), postcards circulated with the same fervor, if not speed, of images on popular social media apps today. The Suffrage Postcard Project looks back at the early decades of the 1900s in the context of the women’s suffrage movement, a movement that gained momentum in the same historical moment of the Golden Age of postcards and produced hundreds of pro- and anti-suffrage images. This project asks: How can feminist DH and data visualization approaches to over 700 postcards offer new perspectives on the visual history of the U.S. suffrage movement?

    Vian Rasheed - 11.11.2019 - 23:12