Call for Responses: The Digital Divide

Call for Responses: The Digital Divide

Jamie Henthorn's picture

by Jamie Henthorn — Old Dominion University
February 15, 2013 – 09:54

 

The MediaCommons Front Page Collective is looking for responses to the survey question: How do you see the digital divide in your work and scholarship?

Digital Humanities scholarship tends to be overwhelmingly weighted toward young, predominantly – though not exclusively – white scholars working within Western contexts and institutions, producing on the one hand a bit of an echo effect, on the other hand an academic variation on the digital divide, wherein important perspectives have tremendous difficulty being heard, or else are noted only for their “otherness.” With this survey, we want to extend opportunities to non-western digital humanities scholars, as well as digital humanities scholars focused on non-dominant communities and practices to address the stakes in maintaining this “divide.”

Responses may include but are not limited to:

– Non-Western perspectives on the digital humanities
– Digital humanities as cultural imperialism?
– Can the subaltern digital human speak?
– ageism in the digital humanities
– the problem of color blindness/role of white privilege in digital humanities work
– Digital humanities and digital feminism
– Queering the digital humanities
– What role for the non-digital humanities?

Responses are 300-400 words and typically focus on introducing an idea. Proposals may be brief (a few sentences) and should state your topic and approach. Submit proposals tomediacommons.odu@gmail.comby March 1 to be considered for inclusion into this project. The project will run from March 18 through April 12.

In case you are unfamiliar with MediaCommons, we are an experimental project created in 2006 by Drs. Kathleen Fitzpatrick and Avi Santo, seeking to envision how a born-digital scholarly press might re-conceptualize both the processes and end-products of scholarship. MediaCommons was initially developed in collaboration with the Institute for the Future of the Book through a grant from the MacArthur Foundation and is currently supported by New York University’s Digital Library Technology Services through funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Opportunity: Jump-start your Python, R and Gephi skills, Nijmegen, Radboud University

Dr Mike Kestemont, University of Antwerp; Dr Marten Düring, Radboud
University Nijmegen
03.04.2013-05.04.2013, Nijmegen, Radboud University
Deadline: 15.03.2013

Jump-start your Python, R and Gephi skills

This intensive three-day workshop will equip both junior and senior
scholars with the ability and skills to “go digital”. The goal of this
workshop is to offer its participants the skills to understand the
potential of selected tools in Digital Humanities (DH), to consider
their application within the realms of their own field and, eventually,
to be able to start their own eHumanities projects. The workshop will
consist of three modules: Programming in Python, Statistics in R and
Network Analysis with Gephi. These modules will be designed to build
upon each other, thereby putting newly acquired skills to practical use
immediately. We also want to ensure a productive exchange between
participants as well as the instructors and, as such, the development of
long-lasting networks. In keeping with ALLC’s principal interests, the
workshop has a firm emphasis on the computational analysis of textual
data, be they literary or linguistic.

To ensure the broad coverage of relevant techniques for the workshop, we
have selected three generic research tools which are currently widely
applied within the eHumanities.
The programming language Python is widely used within many scientific
domains nowadays and the language is readily accessible to scholars from
the Humanities. Python is an excellent choice for dealing with
(linguistic as well as literary) textual data, which is so typical of
the Humanities. Workshop participants will be thoroughly introduced to
the language and be taught to program basic algorithmic procedures.
Because of the workshop’s emphasis on textual data, special attention
will be paid to linguistic applications of Python, e.g. Pattern.
Finally, participants will be familiarized with key skills in
independent troubleshooting.

Deplored by many DH scholars, most humanities curricula today fail to
offer a decent training in statistics. At the same time, a majority of
DH applications make use of quantitative tools in one way or the other.
We seek to provide our participants with hands-on experience with a
common statistical tool, R, with a specific emphasis on the practical
implementation of statistics and potential pitfalls. The statistical
software package R is widely used in the scientific processing and
visualisation of textual data.

Network visualizations can be counted among the most prominent and
influential forms of data visualization today. However, the processes of
data modelling, its visualization and the interpretation of the results
often remain a “black box”. The module on Gephi will introduce the key
steps in the systematization of relational data, its collection from
non-standardized records such as historical sources or works of fiction,
the potential and perils of network visualizations and computation and
finally the identification of relevant patterns and their significance
for the overall research question.

The workshop seeks to provide as much practical skills and knowledge in
as little time as possible. Each module will have the same basic
structure: After an introduction to the respective method and the
targets for the day, the participants will solve pre-defined tasks. The
workshop embraces the concept of trial and error and learning based on
one’s own accomplishments rather than passive information reception.

Registration

Participants are expected to pay a fee of EUR 60 and to make
arrangements for their travel and accommodation. Thanks to the EADH (ex
ALLC) funding we have received we are able to offer free lunch on all
three days as well as a farewell dinner.

In addition, we can offer 2 bursaries for students/participants who have
no other source of funding.

In order to register, please email Mike Kestemont at
mike.kestemont@gmail.com or Marten Düring at md@martenduering.com by
March 15th. Applicants are asked to include a short CV, a statement of
their previous experience with the above mentioned tools and their
research goals.

Previous experience in either programming, statistics or data
visualization is not required.

For further information of eHumanities research at Radboud University
Nijmegen and on the workshop, please visit http://www.ru.nl/ehumanities

Generously funded by the ALLC – The European Association for Digital
Humanities and with support from Radboud University Nijmegen

————————————————————————
Programme

We are very happy to have brought together a team of instructors who are
both experts in their field and great teachers:

Day 1: Programming in Python and basic Natural Language Processing tools
(Instructors: Folgert Karsdorp, Meertens Institut Amsterdam and Maarten
van Gompel, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen)

Day 2: Basic statistics in R (Instructor: Peter Hendrix, University of
Tübingen)

Day 3: Data modelling and network visualizations in Gephi (Instructor:
Clément Levallois, Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Homepage <http://www.ru.nl/ehumanities>

URL zur Zitation dieses Beitrages
<http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/id=21210>

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oder Aktualität der von unseren Nutzern beigetragenen Inhalte. Bitte
beachten Sie unsere AGB:
<http://www.clio-online.de/agb>.

_________________________________________________
HUMANITIES – SOZIAL- UND KULTURGESCHICHTE
H-SOZ-U-KULT@H-NET.MSU.EDU
Redaktion:
E-Mail: hsk.redaktion@geschichte.hu-berlin.de
WWW:    http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de
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FREENET.ORG

Hello Digital Humanists!

A friend back in Brazil just sent me the link to this exciting project based in Rio. What does it have to do with us? Everything. Freenet is discussing the future of the internet (well, you might ask, isn’t everyone?) in a collaborative way. Part of the project is trying to collect videos of experiences with the digital, aiming 5 different themes. Why don’t you take a look at the site (versions in English, Portuguese and Spanish)? Maybe we could send a video as a group!

http://www.freenetfilm.org/

Chicago DH

With the help of some colleagues from Loyola and IIT, I’ve started Chicago DH, an informal group of/for scholars, technologists, librarians, and others dedicated to sharing digital humanities events, announcements, questions, and discussions in and around Chicago. Our goal is to use Google Groups along with a forthcoming website (http://chicago.digitalhumaniti.es/) and Twitter account (@ChicagoDH) to share DH events and announcements across the many campuses in the Chicago area in the hopes of building a stronger community and sharing learning resources and opportunities. If you’re interested in joining the mailing list (to which you can also post) please visit https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/chicago-dh and request to join. Hopefully as we get more users across all of our institutions it can become a vital and vibrant resource. Michael and Jillana, if you’re interested in participants from other campuses, please add NUDHL meeting session announcements to this list!

Hey, Northwestern HASTAC Scholars: Please Read This!

Hello, fellow HASTAC grad students!

I’m writing, per Michael’s suggestion, to start a conversation about where we’d like to take the HASTAC program next quarter (Spring 2013). As we all know, this has been a busy two quarters for all of us, and I know some of us have scheduling conflicts with this quarter’s meetings. So in the spirit of making the most of our last quarter as HASTAC Scholars, let’s start thinking about what we’d like to accomplish this spring!

At the end of our last NUDHL meeting, we kicked around the idea of setting up a structured series of events and meetings for the HASTAC grad students. I suggested that we might take turns signing up for biweekly, informal presentations. I use the word “presentation” loosely here, because I was thinking we could take turns sharing our research with one another in a low-pressure atmosphere, as-is, wherever we happen to be in the research process. For example, as a first-year student, I’m still in the beginning stages of my research. So if I were scheduled to share with the group, I could bring in my evidence in its messy form (some blurry photographs of my archival documents, some more organized transcriptions that have been tagged and catalogued in Zotero, etc.). Then, I could explain to the group what I’m trying to do with my project, and open up the floor for suggestions from fellow grad students. This could be something as basic as how to organize my evidence more efficiently, or more complex like how to use a new piece of digital text analysis software, or more theoretically grounded like how to ask different questions of my source material. The point is that it would be relaxed and constructive for each of us — not merely another task, but something that would help us to engage more effectively with the digital in our own research. And we would do this in a grad-friendly atmosphere, because even while we are lucky to have some very accessible and friendly faculty in our NUDHL meetings, we all know that it can be a bit intimidating to share your work with established faculty when you are just starting out. We could approach this with the understanding that we’re all in different places — in the PhD process, in our encounters with DH, or even just in different disciplines. No pressure, no stress.

Similarly, Lisa mentioned that it might be helpful to also set up some workshops that focus explicitly on learning about new tools and technologies, where we could bring in a guest speaker and acquire some practical skills.

So, what do you think? Do me a favor and share your thoughts and ideas in the comments below. What would be helpful for you, so that we can make the spring quarter a productive and positive experience for everyone?

(Thanks in advance, and looking forward to collaborating with each of you!)

 

best wishes,

Emily

Thinking about memory and the digital

Hello, all —

I saw that Michael shared this link on Twitter, but thought I’d throw it on here for those of you who haven’t seen it. In her (brief) blog post, Yvonne Seale reflects on a recent presentation at the U of Iowa by Jennifer Shook, and thinks about the challenges of digital commemoration. I think she raises some interesting questions about privacy and the necessity of maintaining digital memory products. In the comments below the post, she suggests that we might think about the digital memorial as more of a verb than a noun, to emphasize its continual transformation/making. I think it’s worth checking out!

Yvonne Seale, “Love, Death, and Digital Memories” @ HASTAC:
http://hastac.org/blogs/yvonneseale/2013/02/16/love-death-and-digital-memories

Checking in; and digital dissertations

Hello NUDHLers! My schedule blocks me from attending the sessions this quarter, but I have been attempting to make up for my absence through occasional conversations with some of you as well as though fthis blog. I also found Ben Pauley’s visit to be particularly interesting and helpful.

Emily, thanks for jotting down some of your thoughts in preparation for tomorrow’s session. While I’m (again) not going to be there, I want to pass along to you all two brief articles that might be somewhat germane. The Chronicle of Higher Education published a piece this week that gives  accounts of three graduate students working on “digital dissertations” at Emory, Stanford, and UVa. It’s important that their projects are getting some press, although the article still seems to understand their projects as exceptional in some way (at least, that’s how I see it). The link to the article is here. Another good piece on the changing nature of the dissertation that appeared in the Chronicle on the same day is here. To branch off of some of your comments then, Emily, I’m beginning to wonder about how this supposedly crowning achievement of doctoral study could/needs to change, and exactly where this priority lies in relation to other DH questions. How can/should DH make our graduate studies programs sustainable?

I realize that through my comments here I’m late in joining what I’m sure is already a rich and developed conversation this quarter. I only wanted to share these articles and to register a couple thoughts. I hope the meeting goes well tomorrow, and I’ll try to join you all in person again A.S.A.P.

ASK

 

 

A few questions for tomorrow’s discussion

Hello all –

In anticipation of our meeting tomorrow, I just wanted to throw out a couple of questions that came up for me during the readings. My apologies, but they’re more bullet points and random questions than anything organized. Will look forward to talking with everyone tomorrow.

  1. In his very brief piece, “The Social Contract of Scholarly Publishing,” Daniel Cohen discusses the way the “social contract of the book” transforms when moving from traditional print publishing to digital publishing. As he points out, the producers of these publications have dedicated a great deal of energy toward their side of this contract. But he claims that many “fewer efforts have been made to influence the mental state of the scholarly audience,” or what he calls the “demand side” (320). But how can we go about doing this? What would this look like? Cohen proposes the idea of community-based curation as a means of selecting publications and promoting them to consumers (321). What would this look like? Where do digital journals fall in this picture? Similarly, I find his call for greater acceptance of publications regardless of their print or digital status intriguing, but what are the problems inherent in recognizing “outstanding academic work wherever and however it is published,” whether the work comes from a blog or a peer-reviewed journal (320)?
  2. Cohen’s piece and others for this week, especially Witmore’s “Text: A Massively Addressable Object,” made me wonder more generally about the way materiality and aesthetics influence the shift from print to digital publication. I found Witmore’s pieces interesting for the way they seem to collapse any hard-and-fast distinction between digital and printed texts and the way we interact with (or address) them.
  3. Alexander Reid’s “Graduate Education and the Ethics of the Digital Humanities” touches on many of the questions we tossed around in our last meeting, regarding incorporating DH training into graduate education. He proposes the idea of a requirement that grad students acquire a “digital literacy,” which he admits would vary across disciplines. So, as in our last meeting, we’re confronted with a series of challenging questions: What constitutes a digital literacy? How can departments expect grad students (and faculty, for that matter) to simultaneously acquire and teach a digital literacy? How can this digital literacy be maintained, so that it does not become outmoded? In building resources into departments (like hiring educators with the ability to teach graduate students these skills, or establishing university-wide initiatives), how might this move inadvertently reinforce existing hierarchies already endemic to higher ed? Considering the realities of funding and resources, and especially coming from an institution with extremely limited resources (where there were lots of first-generation students, like myself), this seems to me a significant problem. On a related point, I come from an MA program that trains both PhD-bound students and students aspiring to teach in secondary ed. Would this digital literacy apply to both, or to each group in different ways? And finally, as always, this piece brings me back to Jillana’s question from the first meeting: how much of this digital literacy is just learning to use new technologies, and how much of it is learning to use new technologies to ask new questions? We might look at Reid’s description of his own department on p. 359, for example.

TALK: Rayid Ghani, Chief scientist for Obama’s campaign, “The Role of Data, Technology, and Analytics in Presidential Elections”

Subject: Ghani Talk at McCormick, Noon on Thurs Feb 7

There’s a talk that faculty and graduate students in the political science department might be interested in attending, but I’m not sure it’s been advertised heavily in Weinberg.

Rayid Ghani, Chief Scientist for Obama’s campaign, will be giving a talk entitled “The Role of Data, Technology, and Analytics in Presidential Elections” as part of the Master of Science in Analytics seminar series run out of McCormick. The talk is this Thurs, Feb 7 at noon in the ITW classroom of the Ford Motor Company Engineering Design Center.

Here’s a link to the news writeup where I learned about the talk:

http://www.analytics.northwestern.edu/news/news-articles/Rayid-Ghani-Chief-Scientist-Obama-Campaign-To-Speak-At-Northwestern-University.html

Vigil

On the topic of humanists writing code, I wanted to share this pretty awesome and definitely hilarious coding language called Vigil, “the eternal morally vigilant programming language,” written by and for moral philosophers. You can find the code on GitHub at https://github.com/munificent/vigil, but the best part (unless you hate philosophy and code jokes, I guess) is the documentation, especially the FAQ.