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Amanda Harris started the topic Call For Papers for volume on Music, Dance and the Archive in the discussion
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoCall For Papers for volume on Music, Dance and the Archive Submissions are invited for a proposed volume exploring music, dance and the archive, focusing in particular on Indigenous performance practices around the world. The volume will be edited by Amanda Harris, Jakelin Troy and Linda Barwick, investigators on the ARC funded project…[Read more]
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Danica Savonick deposited Syllabus for Digital Divides: Race, Class, and Gender in the Age of the Internet in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoSyllabus for an upper-level English seminar at SUNY Cortland | Is Google racist? Is Wikipedia sexist? In this course, we will critically reflect on the digital tools and platforms that mediate so much of our daily lives. More specifically, we will explore how digital technologies can reproduce and challenge conditions of racial, class, and gender…[Read more]
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Rebecca Sutton Koeser deposited About the data: RDF generation for Belfast Group Data in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis document describes the steps that are done by the “prep_dataset” script, which harvests and builds the RDF dataset for the Belfast Group Poetry|Networks website, which is used in part as the basis for the network graphs and chord diagrams. Prior to running the script, significant work was required to 1) to tag names in the EAD and TEI and 2)…[Read more]
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Gregor M. Schwarb deposited Diachronic Intertextualities: Falsafa, Kalām, Uṣūl al-Fiqh in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoComputer-aided comparison between large textual corpora, first and foremost in the areas of falsafa, ʿilm kalām, and uṣūl al-fiqh, Muslim & Jewish & Christian.
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Claire Clivaz deposited Digitized and Digitalized Humanities: Words and Identity in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis paper analyses two closely related but different concepts, digitization and digitalization, first discussed in an encyclopedia article by Brennen and Kreiss in 2016. Digital Humanities mainly uses the first term, whereas business and economics tend to use the second to praise the process of the digitalization of society. But digitalization…[Read more]
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Igor T. C. Rocha deposited Entre o ‘ímpeto secularizador’ e a ‘sã teologia’: tolerância religiosa, secularização e Ilustração católica no mundo luso (séculos XVIII-XIX) in the group
Social History of Archives on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoThis thesis is the result of an investigative work on the formulations and defense ofreligious tolerance in the Catholic Enlightenment of Portugal, to a greater extent, butalso touching on some transits with Brazil. It is assumed that the secularization processthrough which the Iberian kingdom passed, during the eighteenth century, was…[Read more]
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Johann-Mattis List deposited Towards a sustainable handling of interlinear-glossed text in language documentation in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 10 months agoWhile the amount of digitally available data on the worlds’ languages is steadily increasing, with more and more languages being documented, only a small proportion of the language resources produced are sustainable. Data reuse is often difficult due to idiosyncratic formats and a negligence of standards that could help to increase the…[Read more]
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Rebecca Sutton Koeser deposited Archival Biases and Futures in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoSocial network analysis is typically used where data are complete and all connections within a system are known. However, as other humanities networking projects have discovered, building a network based on historical data means that we are inevitably working with incomplete information. In other words, the lack of connections in our graph…[Read more]
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Rebecca Sutton Koeser deposited What Do We Mean When We Say “Belfast Group”? in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoIn creating a project to investigate the relationships among members of the Belfast Group, it is important to know exactly what that Group is. Being specific about this when creating our data was critical so we could accurately measure who was connected to this thing we call “the Belfast Group.” But, as often happens with humanities data, it tur…[Read more]
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Rebecca Sutton Koeser deposited Women in the Belfast Group in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoAs we worked on this project and looked at various iterations of the data, we noticed something troubling about some of the women we knew were associated with the Belfast Group: while they sometimes appeared central to the network at other times they were completely invisible. What was happening?
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Kate Topham deposited Exploring Data Visualization with Flourish in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoVisualization is often the “way in” to our data, both for scholarly analysis and presentation to an audience. However, it is critical to understand the process of visualizing data: who is it for, and what questions does it answer? In this workshop, participants learn how to choose the right visualization for their data, how to prepare their dat…[Read more]
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Kate Topham deposited Parting the Metadata Sea: a Crosswalk to Preserve Religious Sound in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThe American Religious Sounds Project, a joint effort from Michigan State University and Ohio State University, has been gathering sound recordings of American religious life since 2014. The project is undertaking a dual process of expanding to other institutions and ingesting the collection into the Vincent Voice Library at MSU.
With thousands…[Read more] -
Kate Topham deposited Parting the Metadata Sea: a Crosswalk to Preserve Religious Sound in the group
Archives on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThe American Religious Sounds Project, a joint effort from Michigan State University and Ohio State University, has been gathering sound recordings of American religious life since 2014. The project is undertaking a dual process of expanding to other institutions and ingesting the collection into the Vincent Voice Library at MSU.
With thousands…[Read more] -
Johann-Mattis List deposited CLDFBench: Give Your Cross-Linguistic Data a Lift in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoWhile the amount of cross-linguistic data is constantly increasing, most datasets produced today and in the past cannot be considered FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reproducible). To remedy this and to increase the comparability of cross-linguistic resources, it is not enough to set up standards and best practices for data to be…[Read more]
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Johann-Mattis List deposited Improving data handling and analysis in the study of rhyme patterns in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoBy reviewing a recent quantitative study of rhyme patterns in Mandarin Chinese, this study shows how data handling and data analysis in the study of rhyme patterns can be improved. Suggestions for improvement include (a) a consistent annotation of rhyme data, which is exhaustive and facilitates data reuse, and (b) emphasizes the importance of…[Read more]
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Gavin Holman deposited Llangollen Town Band – Minutes 1925-1957 in the group
Archives on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoSome notes on the history of the band, from the band’s extinct website, together with scans of two books of minutes of the old Llangollen Town Band which were discovered some years ago as part of a parcel of books in an antique shop in Yorkshire. It is not known how or when the books became “lost”, but the original books now reside safely with the…[Read more]
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Shannan Palma deposited Entitled to a happy ending: Fairy-tale logic from “Beauty and the Beast” to the incel movement in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoThe author proposes fairy-tale logic as a mode of magical thinking typified by the belief that certain functions, fulfilled correctly and in the right order, lead to predictable outcomes. Mapping similarities in implicit reasoning within “Beauty and the Beast,” the reality television program Beauty and the Geek (2005-08), and the misogynistic nar…[Read more]
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