Session: Talk – THATCamp AHA 2015 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org Just another THATCamp site Tue, 06 Jan 2015 21:39:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Session Proposal: Open Access and the History Dissertation http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2015/01/06/open-access-and-the-history-dissertation/ Tue, 06 Jan 2015 16:47:22 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=276

Scheduled for 2:30-3:20 in Room 601, 66 W 12th Street

In 2013, the American Historical Association put out a statement encouraging graduate programs and university libraries to allow students to embargo their dissertations for up to 6 years. They wrote, “History has been and remains a book-based discipline, and the requirement that dissertations be published online poses a tangible threat to the interests and careers of junior scholars in particular.” I propose a session where we talk about open access and the history dissertation. I’d like the conversation to include many different voices, from grad students to librarians to professors. Some potential questions I’m interested in exploring include:

Why might graduate students want to make their dissertation open access?

How can history departments and libraries work together to ensure that graduate students know and understand the different options for distributing their work?

What’s the main purpose of a history dissertation anyways?

 

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Session Proposal: Digital Dawdle — Smartphones for Historic Sites http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2015/01/05/session-proposal-digital-dawdle-workshop-on-smartphones-for-historic-sites/ http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2015/01/05/session-proposal-digital-dawdle-workshop-on-smartphones-for-historic-sites/#comments Mon, 05 Jan 2015 20:27:21 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=317

Scheduled for 1:30-2:20 in Theresa Lang Auditorium (202), 55 W 13th Street

Digital Dawdle: Walk and Talk around a Historic Site, connecting via Social Media. We scurry by statues, buildings, and historic spots every day without slowing down to take in the atmosphere or soak up the history. How do we slow down the urban walker and animate the flow in the field? Kathleen Hulser and Steve Bull are working on stimulating conversations via augmented reality and audio about women’s history in NYC’s public spaces in a project called “Caught in the Act: Restoring Women’s Memory in Public Space.”  We would like to brainstorm how people have used devices in the field to spark conversations, what are the best participation paradigms, scale, techniques for involvement, size and complexity of layers. We see how the Talking Statues of London work but have a more dialogue-oriented approach in mind.

Here’s map of the London Talking Statues. http://static.guim.co.uk/ni/1408118379892/London’s-talking-statues.pdf This is a pertinent model, but not exactly what we want to do, since we are using different types of sound, and augmented reality, along with social media components that are intended to make this a cumulative, live archive of experiences.

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Session Proposal: Visualization http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2015/01/05/visualization/ http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2015/01/05/visualization/#comments Mon, 05 Jan 2015 17:54:00 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=311

This session will take place from 3:30-4:20pm in the Theresa Lang Auditorium (202), 55 W 13th Street

This is an unformed suggestion written as I sit here in the visualization session in the last AHA time slot on Monday. At 12:45 there are still some 40 people in the room. This wasn’t the only well-attended visualization session of the conference either. Maybe there’s more conversation to be had on this topic?

I have no particular expertise but would be interested in participating. Right now I’m thinking about what types of visualizations can help to answer what types of historical questions.

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Session proposal: What Should the Next THATCamp(s) Look Like? http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2014/12/31/what-should-the-next-thatcamps-look-like/ Wed, 31 Dec 2014 02:22:45 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=274

Scheduled for 1:30-2:20pm in the Hirshon Suite (205), 55 W. 13th Street

Whether this is your first THATCamp or your 20th, you are participating in a remarkably wide-reaching process of talking, making, learning, and sharing the digital humanities.  Since the first THATCamp in May 2008 at George Mason University’s Center for History and New Media there have been well over 150 THATCamp unconferences all over the world, reaching thousands of people.

As one of the members of THATCamp Council (elected under a community-produced THATCamp Council Charter), I’m particularly interested in what both new and experienced THATCampers would like to see from future THATCamps.  So, I’m proposing a session where we talk broadly about the future of THATCamp.  What role can and should these unconferences serve in reaching and serving people interested in the digital humanities?

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Session proposal: What should the ideal Digital Humanities course look like? http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2014/12/29/talk-session-proposal-what-should-the-ideal-digital-humanities-course-look-like/ Mon, 29 Dec 2014 23:42:49 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=271

Scheduled as part of teaching conversations from 10:45-11:20am at Theresa Lang auditorium, 55 W 13th Street

I am wondering how one would design the perfect course for a degree in digital humanities. Should it have technical and non-technical modules at equal measure? Should it have more humanistic modules for those with a stronger technical background, and more technical modules for those with a first degree in a humanities discipline? Should it train students to master the commonly encountered technologies in DH, such as NLP, Text Mining or GIS? Should it teach programming skills, or just software usage? Focus on collaborative tools/software, or teach basic technical skills so that students can extend their expertise into new areas? Should it include modules on hacking/making (i.e. Arduino/RaspberryPi projects)? What about project management and modules on legal issues, such as copyright laws, given that many DH projects are big digitization projects?

While I am fully aware that DH is broad (a.ka. the “big tent”), it leaves me wondering what kind of teaching a university degree course should offer. I’d be interested to hear/discuss what people (both novices and experts) think about this.

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Session proposal: Humanities GIS. Is there a point(x,y)? http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2014/12/29/talk-session-proposal-humanities-gis-is-there-a-pointxy/ Mon, 29 Dec 2014 23:26:53 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=268

Scheduled for 2:30-3:20 in Hirshon Suite (205), 55 W. 13th Street

While the use of GIS for the humanities (particularly history) has been discussed for quite some time now, it still seems to be unclear to many scholars what kind of fundamental new insights GIS is supposed to deliver. Given its nature as positivistic tool that allows one only to deal with Euclidean geometries and Cartesian spaces, it seems somewhat implausible that GIS can offer more than trivial visualizations of locations and quantitative data. I would like to have a session where we could discuss these issues, i.e. what epistemic value GIS offers for the humanities, what kind of space it represents (i.e. predominantly Western, male spaces?), or what the alternative to the existing GIS software could be.

Looking at the kind of visualizations that GIS offers — most of the time, thematic maps — I wonder what the deal is. These kind of maps have been produced for over  a hundred years now, but they often lack context and provide for little more than banal illustrations with little to no explanatory power. Frankly, what can we learn from a GIS in the humanities we couldn’t learn otherwise? We have been told that there is a “Spatial Turn” in the humanities for two decades now or so, so why is there not more GIS in scholarly work?

I have both argued for alternative software (and developed it) and for alternative approaches (e.g. use GIS as paint program rather than as scientific tool, and interpret its visualizations accordingly). I’d like to discuss/hear other people’s opinions and experiences.

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Session proposal: Tumblr as Introductory Platform for Digital Scholarship http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/2014/12/22/workshop-tumblr-as-introductory-platform-for-scholarly-content-management/ Mon, 22 Dec 2014 18:41:22 +0000 http://aha2015.thatcamp.org/?p=258

Scheduled for 3:30-4:20 in Room 601, 66 W 12th Street

In this session, I’m interested in exploring Tumblr as an introductory platform for digital scholarship. This session will provide an overview of the platform, strong examples of use rooted in scholarship and access, and finally select and post sample content to our own test blog using open access materials.

This session will take a closer look at a popular social media powerhouse made for the presentation of multimedia materials, and how the DH community can take full advantage of the platform. Flexible, intuitive, and familiar to many new users, this platform supports clear opportunities for scholarship through design, display, discovery, and description. This session aims to provide an overview of the key features of this platform, as well as outline the opportunities presented by the platform for scholarship and creation within the DH community.

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