Categories
Event off campus

Workshops at Scholars’ Lab

UVA’s Scholars’ Lab has a series of workshops that may be of interest to our faculty.

 

Categories
Event off campus

Bucknell Digital Scholarship Conference – Call for Proposals

Bucknell Digital Scholarship Conference: 14-16 November 2014
Call for Proposals

Bucknell University, with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will host its first annual international digital scholarship conference. The theme of the conference is “Collaborating Digitally: Engaging Students in Faculty Research” with the goal of gathering a broad community of scholar-practitioners engaged in collaborative digital scholarship in research and teaching.

This conference will bring together a broad community of scholar-practitioners engaged in collaborative digital scholarship in research and teaching. We encourage presentations that emphasize forms of collaboration: between institutions of higher education; across disciplines; between faculty, librarians, and technologists; and between faculty and students. We welcome contributions from scholars, educators, technologists, librarians, administrators, and students who use digital tools and methods, and encourage submissions from emerging and established scholar-practitioners alike, including those who are new to digital collaboration.

Submission topics may include but are not limited to: engaging with space and place; creating innovative teaching and learning environments; perspectives on implications for the individual’s own research and pedagogy within the institutional landscape, etc.

Presentations may take the form of short papers, project demos, electronic posters, panel discussions, or lightning talks.

For more information about submitting a presentation proposal, please go to the Bucknell Digital Initiatives website: http://goo.gl/eoOnK4 . The deadline for proposals is August 1, 2014.

If you have questions or would like more information about the submission process, please email conference coordinator Diane Jakacki: diane.jakacki@bucknell.edu.

Bucknell is a private liberal arts university located alongside the historic Susquehanna River in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. At Bucknell “Digital Scholarship” is defined as any scholarly activity that makes extensive use of one or more of the new possibilities for teaching and research opened up by the unique affordances of digital media. These include, but are not limited to, new forms of collaboration, new forms of publication, and new methods for visualizing and analyzing data.

Categories
Event on campus

Winter 2013 Faculty Academy: DH in the Classroom

The W&L Digital Humanities Working Group is excited to announce our Winter 2013 Faculty Academy: DH in the Classroom.  We hope you can come for some or all of the events!

Categories
Incentive Grants Pedagogy

DH Pedagogy Incentive Grant Winners

The Digital Humanities Working Group was inspired by the number, variety, depth, and breadth of the submissions to the incentive grant proposals.  The group had a lively discussion about the relative merits and impact of all the proposals.  In the end, we chose the following awardees:

  • Hank Dobin, ENGL 292: Representing Queen Elizabeth
  • Sascha Goluboff, ANTH 290: Campus Sex in the Digital Age
  • Wan-Chuan Kao, ENGL 382: Hotel Orient
  • Howard Pickett, Poverty 102: Field Work in Poverty Studies

We look forwarding to hearing about the awardees’ and their students’ experiences in these courses.  The awardees will be presenting their DH course projects–challenges, successes, failures, and lessons learned–in a Fall 2014 Faculty Academy session.

Categories
Digital Humanist of the Month People

Matthew Bailey: September Digital Humanities Scholar

See the story on the W&L news blog.

 

Categories
People Research Projects

W&L Faculty to Present Collaborative Project at LAWDI Institute

A story about classics professor Rebecca Benefiel and computer science professor Sara Sprenkle’s Ancient Graffiti Project: W&L Faculty to Present Collaborative Project at LAWDI Institute

Categories
Event on campus People Project Update

W&L Faculty to Present Collaborative Project at LAWDI Institute

A story about classics professor Rebecca Benefiel and computer science professor Sara Sprenkle’s Ancient Graffiti Project: W&L Faculty to Present Collaborative Project at LAWDI Institute

Categories
Digital Humanist of the Month People

April Digital Humanist of the Month: Rachel Schnepper

Dr. Rachel Schnepper discussing the War on Christmas on HuffPost Live
Dr. Rachel Schnepper discussing the War on Christmas on HuffPost Live

For Dr. Rachel Schnepper and her students in History 229: Media and Politics in Early Modern England, studying life and culture in sixteenth and seventeenth century England from Lexington, VA is a difficult task.   While there are many secondary sources available at Leyburn Library, the primary sources are lacking.  Thanks to online access to many digitized primary sources, however, students can begin to formulate and answer new research questions that previous generations of undergraduate researchers could only dream of.

“Using digital humanities databases greatly expands the primary sources available to students.  With these databases, students can access eighteenth century English court records and newspapers, passenger manifests of penal transport ships to Australia, or the records of slavers from the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.  Access to all of these would be impossible for my students without the developments that have occurred in digital humanities in the past 10 years.”

Schnepper’s student Elizabeth Bucklee ’13 agrees.  Her final paper project examines the libels written in response to the 1631 trial of the earl of Castlehaven whose wife and son accused him of rape and sodomy.  Elizabeth studied the libels using Early Stuart Libels, a database of early seventeenth century political poetry.  Elizabeth noted that this was the first time she actively searched for primary sources on her own: “Usually for a humanities paper, you figure out your topic, do a book search in Leyburn, logon to JSTOR, and see where that takes you.  The context in which I was looking for [primary sources] was completely different and that changed the nature of the search. I looked at the primary sources first and foremost in determining my topic.”

Elizabeth and another student from History 229 presented their final paper projects in the first organized digital humanities panel discussion in the history of W&L at the Science Society and the Arts (SSA) conference held in March.  The packed panel session that Schnepper organized and helped lead brought together students and faculty from history, classics, German, and computer science.

Det Beal ‘14 also presented his work from Schnepper’s 218 course at SSA in a busy afternoon poster session.  Using the Burney Database, Det traced the usage of the use of the word “yankee” in British newspapers during the American Revolution, which revealed  how “as the war progressed and British defeat became more evident, Britains stopped using the word as much and it became almost invisible after the war.”

Det Beal '14 presenting his project from History 218
Det Beal ’14 presenting his project from History 218

Based on his experience with digital databases in Professor Schnepper’s class, Det felt empowered to expand the scope of his papers in other classes: he knew he could access similar online resources for other topics that interested him, which he has done this past term in Prof. Senechal’s History of Violence in America course.  Professor Schnepper’s class opened my eyes to the kind of wide ranging research you can do.  You are not simply limited to what the professor gives you.  Professor Senechal allowed us to either do an incident that she knows that was very well publicized, which a large majority of the class is doing, but I chose instead to pick something of my interest because I knew the [digital] resources would be available to get in-depth with a project that I was really interested in.”

Schnepper reiterates the value of the digital data: “The aggregating of all of this material digitally allows both me and my students to manipulate the primary sources to reveal new insights into the past.  For example, my GIS representation of London stationers of the 1640s enables me to physically reconstruct the print trade of revolutionary London along the lines of religious and political allegiances.”

Brendan Hartsell ’13, another student in Schnepper’s History 229, has likewise used online databases to create his own analytical frameworks to uncover and analyze popular perceptions of Quakers during the second half of the seventeenth century.  Using the English Broadside Ballad Archive, Hartsell was able to hone his data analysis skills.  He said, “I was able to look through all of these broadside ballads and figure out where they fit in a number of criteria.  Through this, I was able to find a lot of information that had not previously been published, like the prevalence of sexual themes.”  He added, proudly, “In the past, any data would have been received from secondary sources, so this is my first time actually finding that out for myself.”

Brendan’s pride underscores one of Schnepper’s main pedagagical goals: in using the digital humanities resources, students become skilled in a variety of analytical tools.    “Students learn how to navigate new technologies with savvy, how to manipulate digital resources and massage information out of them.  These are invaluable skills for them to learn, particularly in a world that has taken a digital turn,” she said.  Thus, advocacy is the central role Schnepper has played during her second year as a Mellon Post-doctoral Fellow in history.

Beyond her own courses, Schnepper has been an active consultant for the new W&L Introduction to Digital Humanities Spring term course.  “Dr. Schnepper has been a great resource of ideas on what topics and tools we should cover and how we can engage the broad, multi-disciplinary student audience,” said Dr. Sara Sprenkle, assistant professor of computer science, who is co-teaching the new course with Dr. Paul Youngman, associate professor of German.  Youngman also emphasizes her value as a sounding board, “Professor Schnepper’s rich imagination has proven to be a real asset as we begin planning for this unique course.”

Schnepper has been a resource to other faculty as well.  She said, “With my colleagues here at W&L, I’ve found that many are very interested in the digital humanities and have projects of their own in mind, only they simply did not know how to go about doing them.”  She has been involved in conversations with professors in departments across campus, learning about their research and sharing with them the digital tools available to realize their ideas.  Associate professor of sociology Jonathan Eastwood is one of those faculty members who sought Schnepper’s counsel.  He said, “Rachel has been a great resource as I have begun taking an interest in digital humanities initiatives.  Not only is she knowledgeable about a wide range of tools, but she is also a trained historian.  As such, she is uniquely capable of drawing linkages between technological resources and the kinds of substantive questions in which I am interested.”

Schnepper is optimistic about the future of history and the digital humanities.  She said, “Digitizing the archive will enable historians to not only do the sort of archival research they love to do, but allow them to do it in new and immensely productive ways that reveal more about the past.”  Beyond historians themselves, Schnepper is excited by the opportunities to “make the digital archive a useful and productive resource not just for us historians, but also for the students in our classrooms and the students outside of universities who want to learn more about their history or the history of other countries.”