Meeting #1 Reflections

A few themes I discerned from our first meeting. This is quickly written and meant to inspire corrections, negations, queries, wonderments, questions. Please add your own perspective, perceptions, affirmations, theories, frustrations, curiosities, concerns:

DH, D vs. H, D & H, DH as R&D

The question is not only what does the digital offer the humanities, but also what can the humanities offer the digital? Both questions are important, and the dialectic between them might be especially productive.

DH and Research

How does DH help us to frame old questions in new ways? How might it help to develop new questions? Can definitions of DH constrain? Can more constrained definitions of the emerging field be helpful at times? How might each of us in our work (as scholars, teachers, technology folk, librarians) dive into the the “transductive plasma of interpretation” that Rafael Alvarado describes in his essay on Debates in the Digital Humanities?

DH and Scale

DH seems to increase awareness of scale—of the oscillation, often rapid, between difference amounts of evidence or information. Does it have something to offer humanities scholars in this movement between the small (zooming in on the hi-res detail of a famous painting) and the large (a huge text corpus or dataset)?

DH and Speed

DH similarly seems to pose the possibility of both speeding up humanities research/teaching and also, more surprisingly, slowing it down. You can search across vast pools of data or text or information quickly. You can also use the digital to slow down concentration on particular evidence, arguments, phenomena, methodologies, practices. Once again the key modality to explore may well be the oscillation between different speeds of research/teaching.

DH as Episteme

How does DH relate to the current historical moment? Is it a weird instantiation in the academic world of new managerial practices and structural phenomena? Are we experiencing the transformation of knowledge into “information” so that the urge is not to understand so much as to “do something” with what we are studying? Is modularity replacing the specificity, friction, resistance of humanities theory and critique? Is there a rapprochement between poststructural critique and larger systems of which we are part (Lane Relyea’s fascinating observation)? Is there a growing emphasis on large-scale and small-scale levels of knowledge and interaction but a loss of the middle-ground between the macro and the micro? Is DH a kind of shadow world of larger structural and cultural systems? Does this mean that it is an ominous development or something that takes or even subverts the dominant ideas and practices of our era in potentially new directions?

DH and Democracy

Two very different (or perhaps not?) questions of inclusivity and exclusivity arose. First, in what ways do the digital humanities pose new linkages between specialized scholarly work and broader public outreach? Second, are the digital humanities an intervention, either explicitly or implicitly, in the existing hierarchies of the academy itself? The first question is about the kind of work going on with a group such as Imagining America or the Public Humanities in a Digital World initiative at University of Iowa (two of many examples in the US context alone). The second is far more fraught, particularly for graduate students and junior scholars, in that the modes of exploring scholarly questions through the digital humanities (cooperative rather than solo, through new modes of communication and publication, in new forms and formats) potentially reshape the ways in which individual distinction leads to prominence or even just a foothold or halfway decent position in a humanities discipline. How many risks does a young, aspiring scholar in the humanities want to take? What kinds of structural changes in the academy (tenure and promotion questions being the most fraught and pressing) would preserve the best aspects of vetting while allowing scholars to take more of these kinds of risks? Is it possible to picture a humanities landscape in which the current superstar system is replaced by something more democratic and egalitarian? Could the digital help in this project?

DH and Print Culture/Embodied Culture

We tend to start out by thinking of the digital as opposed to the book and print culture, as well as to face-to-face culture of the traditional classroom, but might we actually be able to find ways that the digital weaves through (streams through?) the material in transformative and productive ways? The digital not as a rupture from prior technologies, practices, and modes of scholarship/teaching/life but rather as a continuation? If so, how? In what ways? To what ends?

DH and Pedagogy

What should DH in the classroom look like? Coursera? New kinds of interactions between face-to-face and online teaching? Should it be more efficient and cheaper or more complex and expensive?

What else? What did I miss?

Life Cache? Literary Cache?

Dear members of NUDHL,

I have a very good reason for writing so late: yesterday I was watching the presidential debate, live-twitting, live fact-checking online and today I was doing… the same thing, but for the local elections in Rio de Janeiro. The time I most enjoy using all this web tools is when elections come . For some reason, I sense that the voters enjoy having the digital tools to engage as citizens. Well, I was a journalist before coming back to academia, that might also mean I’m an election/ debate addict.

I just came from Brazil to start the PhD in the Spanish and Portuguese Department here at NU. I’m part of the first class of this new PhD Program, which makes everything very exciting. My major interest is memory and memory studies in the literary field. But I will be working mainly with contemporary authors and how this genre, this kind of discourse is shaped today. If literature was at some point the space that shaped discourses, reactions, even documented eras, where is it now? Still in the literature? Is it somewhere else? Finally, how does the Internet influence all that?

Also, when we talk about this eternal archiving the web provides I can’t help to think about the traditional archives. How did the “big data” change the way we store raw-material for our own memories? And how do we perceive other’s memories? I have more questions than answers now.

Part of thinking about Digital Humanities and thinking through it, for me, is how the digital is invading every sphere of life and thinking, many times without getting the needed attention.

P.S: Sarah, I’m also a bookie, always guilty for spending so much time on the internet and not on my beloved paper-made objects.

Can’t wait to meet you all!

Juliana

NUDHL Research Seminar Meeting 1

WELCOME TO NUDHL, The Northwestern University Digital Humanities Laboratory.

NUDHL fosters an interdisciplinary space for investigating the emerging role of digital humanities in faculty and student research, teaching, learning, public scholarship, civic engagement, and other relevant topics. Over the course of the academic year, the workshop will include discussions of recent scholarship in the field and presentations of research-in-progress by workshop participants. We seek to cultivate an ongoing conversation that helps members explore how to bring to bear the digital on their own research agendas.

The first meeting of NUDHL’s 2012-2013 Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities Research Workshop will be Friday, Oct. 5, from 12-2PM. We look forward to seeing you there as well as online at www.nudhl.net.

Meeting #1
What Are the Digital Humanities?
Friday, October 5, noon-2pm
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities Conference Room
Kresge Hall 2-370 (click for map).

READINGS:

If you have not yet registered for NUDHL and wish to be added to the NUDHL mailing list, please contact the co-conveners: Michael Kramer, History and American Studies, mjk@northwestern.edu, or Jillana Enteen, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program and Asian American Studies Program, j-enteen@northwestern.edu.

See you Friday, Oct. 5, 12-2pm at the AKiH and online at www.nudhl.net!

NUDHL: www.nudhl.net
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