Google Maps Project for S,Q & F: How realistic is collaboration?

Map of New York City Police Stops Interactive Feature

As mentioned in class, the project idea I had in mind (regarding the stop, question and frisk procedure reform) would require the use of interactive maps, something mentioned in class but which has not yet been explored in depth.  I wonder how realistic it is to believe someone would allow me to build or collaborate with work they have already put a lot into.  I say this because I was inspired by the map idea I had seen in the New York Times, which is linked above.  In a perfect world I could use this map, which includes many statistics broken down by borough and block, and I would build over it using short narratives to humanize the statistics.  In my mind this sounds like what Digital Humanists have been referring to when they say you do not have to know codes, its the idea of building with one another. But again, is this a realistic goal?  Are the people who built this in the know of Digital Humanities principles of collaboration and building?  They may not know about DH but more importantly will they care about the larger goal?  I wonder how someone, like myself, would go about initiating this task, from reaching out to these people, asking to collaborate and making this a reality?

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Google Maps Project for S,Q & F: How realistic is collaboration?

Overcoming the Narrow Emphasis on Teaching and Pedagogy

Our DH readings this week finally addressed the subject of teaching and pedagogy as best as they could at this point. I say this because it seems to me that while there have been projects carried out, these projects have been few, leaving most of the emphasis on the research portion. In Chapter 21, Diane Zorich was cited speaking of the typical trajectory for the development of most centers. Their initial stimulus is from a grant and a strategic discussion then develop a project to a program and finally a center, each stage signifies the staying power or longevity of the field or project, which in her case was called Survey of Digital Humanities Centers in the United States. This growth trajectory is similar to a product, tool or an interdisciplinary tool (like digital humanities) and in my opinion is similar to the process behind a niche being embraced as more mainstream and thus accepted as a valuable contributor to education that deserves funding.

In one section it was written, “Not only is a digital humanities center inappropriately resource demanding, but such centers do not usually focus on undergraduate teaching, the central task of a liberal arts campus.” This line caught my eye because I have felt as though thus far our focus has been on research and scholarship, all very important subjects at the Graduate Center, but with a course using the word “teaching” in its name I thought we would have equal dialogue in that realm as we would in the research realm. This is not to be taken as an attack it more so leads to my larger point or question. Who is giving focus and energy to this area of teaching? Is DH lending itself more to those interested in distance reading and the connecting research?

In Stephen Brier’s “Where’s the Pedagogy” he reveals even in the Digital Humanities Quarterly at Brown University while their mission statement is “to provide a forum for theorists, researchers and teachers to share their work” the actual definition for Digital Humanities has a “narrower emphasis on academic research” yet the emphasis has been on research over teaching. I wonder, how much energy is actually being given to this one side of the binary? When DHers have forums and other events is their equal time given to the subject of teaching or does research run the gambit? I believe it’s a matter of actions speaking volumes, while everyone is paying lip service to the value of DH as an instructional tool most are using it for research. Maybe this is why the discourse is as such. Additionally maybe some consideration should be given to inviting more undergraduate educator and (dare I say) Secondary school educators. Matt posed the question, what are some of the barriers and Stephen acknowledged it wasn’t technological, someone in class mentioned resources to train teachers but I argue that you aren’t giving teachers credit for what they are capable of learning. I say this because if you invited just a small group of educators to a forum on DH used for instruction and special projects, I don’t believe they wouldn’t get it enough to engage in a small project. I believe part of the barriers are within our mind, if we think it wouldn’t work then we are putting up a barrier but if you give it a chance to see how it works you may be surprised. Similar to applying for a grant to support a DH project, Matt spoke of his experience with this, grants have a great deal of barriers, they require time, effort, convincing but the risk was worth taking. I can see time is an issue for many of the people involved but making sure teachers follow through or have the financial resources aren’t really the responsibility I’m placing on whoever, I’m only arguing to invite and engage. A project like “Looking for Whitman,” could fit comfortably within a High School setting. While the discourse is that schools are teaching to the tests, I still believe literature (like Walt Whitman) is being read. With all the talk about inclusion I can still see areas for growth if given the attention. In the end I was interested to read and hear about the many interesting projects connected to DH. I must say the name Matt Gold is attached to quite a few of them, seems like a lot of weight to carry on one person, although I’m well aware there is plenty of collaboration and building involved.

In class I brought up the project idea I had in mind (regarding the stop, question and frisk procedure reform), seemingly a larger project than can be accomplished within the span of our course but some classmates and both Matt and Stephen mentioned building with someone else. I wonder how realistic it is to believe someone would allow me to build or collaborate with work they have put a lot into. I say this because I was inspired by a map idea I had seen in the New York Times. In a perfect world I could use this map, which includes many statistics broken down by borough and block, and I would build over it using short narratives to humanize the statistics, but again is this a realistic goal? Are the people who built this in the know of Digital Humanities principles of collaboration and building? Probably not, but maybe I’m not giving people credit for working towards a common goal. I will post it to the blog to show type of map I am speaking about. Stay tuned…

Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

My peer review on criticism in DH

As I was writing this peer review, I realized that the scope of the paper itself is too broad and that’s why I was grappling with what deserves more space and thought. I tried to keep the review  focused, but as I was reading it, I realized that it needs a bit more context. One of the assumptions I make is that the reader of the review is familiar with the article. My peer review can be found on the following link:

http://digitalhumanitiesnow.org/2012/01/critical-discourse-in-the-digital-humanities-by-fred-gibbs/

or

if that doesn’t work, I’m appending it here:

I can’t stress enough the saliency of the points you bring up here and I can understand why you want to stay away from established nomenclature, such as “cultural criticism.” The question is do you borrow an existing rhetoric or do you establish a new rhetoric which would be more befitting of a new field? You emphasize how this new field exhibits a deeper and more extensive complexity, however the extent to which digital humanities differs from the other disciplines remains hazy throughout. This argumentation makes a strong case for a lack of critical discourse in DH and highlights the need for valid and effective criticism for acknowledgement in the eyes of insiders as well as outsiders. What struck me particularly was the depth to which your argument aspires and the ability to recognize the interconnections between the fields and the mutual influence they have on each other. I’d like to see a better presentation of how the overarching influence of DH raises demands for changes in criticism as well.
On the same note, you offer an intelligent discussion of the differences between the different disciplines, but you lost me when the conversation turned to digital humanities. The reader is hit with numerous assumptions that don’t receive much attention. Is it possible to flesh some of the critical points you bring up regarding the status of digital humanities and the importance of having a solid rhetoric of criticism? I’m not sure you answer how DH can incorporate a rhetoric and an aesthetics of rhetoric that will set it apart from other disciplines. I agree with you that as a new field DH presents a new challenge to DHers and others and the urgency for validity and for better recognition takes prominence in this piece.

This shows an intelligent attempt to quantify and qualify what DH means and what it should evolve into if it aspires to a stable future.

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on My peer review on criticism in DH

DH and Gendering Code

I wanted to give some links to the post that I mentioned in class by Miriam Posner and also #TransformDH.

I think exploring the boundaries of who may be more and less likely to participate in DH (or any field) is important. Just as the digital divide restricts who is able to participate in online projects (it would be very difficult to participate in many networked projects while relying on access to a public computer for limited amounts of time at your library, for example, or in a rural area without high-speed internet connections) the expectations of skills that DH’ers should have influences who will and will not participate. If programming is seen as something “more men do,” and coding is necessary to be seen as a DH’er, then those who don’t appreciate boys’ clubs might walk away from the DH immediately instead of engaging with and improving the field.

But coding seems to be only one part of the issue here: there is also the way that Miriam argues that some work (coding) seems to be being valued as more important than other work (everything else). How can this be changed? Is it enough to have great projects that put teaching, collaboration or other skills at their center? Can DH avoid entangling with gatekeepers–whether they are (gendered) techies or others? Or can it avoid the dominant culture of privileging white males and relying on forms of academic exclusion?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Some Thoughts on Open Peer Review

Last week we participated in the open peer review process on DHNow; here are some thoughts on the process.  I found the comments box on the site rather limiting, mostly because I wanted the ability to save my comments before posting to the site, as I am faced with frequent interruptions on the computer.  Granted, I wouldn’t have this in a regular blog format, but because it’s being called “peer review” I felt like it should be something more substantial than what I was likely to create in one sitting.  An easy fix was to make a Google Doc, then copy and paste it into the comment box.

The fact that this was a video may have influenced the length of my response; it seemed that I had to explain what was going on in the video first, then contribute my comments.  Had this been a written piece, I could have pointed to concepts and phrasing without so much expository writing on my part.  In class, Alycia suggested approaching these non-text pieces as studio work, as in art practice, and I think this is helpful.

As far as the lack of anonymity goes, I would wager that it actually made my response better.  I spent extra time analyzing the video because I did not want to misinterpret its message.  The more I thought about it, the better I thought it was; I began to see connections and details that I might have missed in a cursory viewing.   Attaching my real name to my comments seemed to compensate in some way for the informality of the blog format, creating a more deliberate and thorough response on my part.

Response to Michael Edson’s video:

Overall, this is a very effective approach to the questions posed by the session, in that it demonstrates, quite deftly, the ease with which new media can upend traditional thought processes. There is no small irony in the fact that a conference session which seeks to learn how museums can “advance beyond the continuation of traditional practices utilizing digital tools,” has instructed participants to do just that–a video recording of a talk, posted on YouTube. This piece both calls attention to this matter and comments on the nature of the questions being asked.

The video brings the discussion back to its roots, by taking the imposed questions from the practical to the philosophical (as per the session title, “Philosophical Leadership Needed for the Future: Digital Humanities Scholars in Museums”), and makes a compelling case for radically re-imagining museums in a digital age. In effect it answers question three by pointing out the enormous gulf between traditional (dare I say elite?) museum culture and the DIY nature of participatory culture and new media, as evidenced by the contrast between an academic discussion at a conference and someone brushing aside scattered receipts from a workspace in order to create a project. That is, museums must involve individuals outside the traditional curatorial sphere to embrace new media culture for the very fact that new media is partly defined by its participatory nature and the democratization of cultural production.

The use of analog tools (paper printouts, marker, and scissors) to re-mix the session’s original questions further suggests that digital tools in and of themselves are not enough to bridge this gap between cultures. Museums need to revisit their raison d’etre and re-evaluate their role before they can effectively address how to approach new methods of interpretation. The key question posed by the piece, then, is, “Can museums understand culture without new media?”

Despite the overall success of the format in advancing Edson’s argument, I do want to call into question one moment in the video. The transformation of “Question 2” to read simply, “What is required of museums?” is, as I understood it, to lead us to contemplate the purpose or role of museums in society. As discussed above, in order to answer whether or not there is a place for the digital humanities in museums we first need to answer what it is that we want museums to do. Yet, there is a utilitarian connotation to asking what is “required,” such that it has the potential to elicit a “Nothing!” response. Or, one might say that conservation is all that is *required*, and that interpretation is a value-added service. I wonder if this is really the question that Edson wishes to ask, or if his discourse is being limited by the constraints of his conceit. Might not a more precise question be, “What is *desired* of museums?” This could invoke viewers to imagine new possibilities (looking forward) instead of recalling core functions (looking past). It is here that one must ask whether form is dictating content, and if so, to what end?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | 1 Comment

My response to DHNow “Demystifying Networks Part 1”

This response is for part I, so apologies if anything I mention is covered in the second part. I agree with the other posts that this is generally a well written and easily readable introduction to networks. As the first part of an introductory article, I’ll try to focus my comments on the ease of understanding the material that you’re presenting.

The most confusing aspect, to me, was the immediate jump into complex graph types in “The Stuff”. As you yourself pointed out, bi- and multi- partite graphs are more complicated and less rigorously studied. A little more time illustrating the most basic graphs, and how they help model data, would help your readers understand the power that networks offer in the kinds of analysis you discuss. As examples you could use something like a graph of citations (directed) or a graph of distances between cities (undirected). Showing how you could analytically determine the “influence” of a paper, or the “difficulty” in moving between two cities, would then naturally move to showing how each of those has central nodes (most influential paper, city closest to the center). When you bring up node centrality in bi-partite graphs, your readers would then have a basis for understanding why that calculation is not meaningful. The same ideas holds true for your section on “The Relationships”. Once you have helped your readers understand graphs with a single type of node and single type of edge, you could move into more complicated graph types.

The second are in which I would suggest more development is when graphs are appropriate, and when they aren’t. You mention in your “Some Warnings” section that it is easy to over-apply network analysis to problems. Your books and authors relationship could be a cautionary example in itself, I was not clear what analytical information you wanted, or would be able to get, out of that example. The tables that you presented with Author and Book data would appear to be perfect candidates for a structured database. It has clearly defined fields, obvious “key” fields, and multiple ways to relate tables to each other. Going into more detail as to why you chose a network to represent this data would go a long way towards helping your audience understand the how and why of network analysis.

With the criticism out of the way, I am looking forward to reading part II, and any other future parts you have.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on My response to DHNow “Demystifying Networks Part 1”

Open Peer Reviewing

Hi All,

Below is my response/open review from Digital Humanities Now‘s open peer review project.

I’ve also been pondering peer review and the writing process over at my website a bit (mostly in reflecting on Planned Obsolescence and thinking about Kathleen Fitzpatrick’s arguments that writing is a social process, or could be more so). I’d be interested to talk more about writing communities and formal processes of open and closed review and as well as more informal feedback that happens conversationally as part of academic writing practices. Most of this interest is because I am working toward a few articles now, and also because I am undergoing the first formal peer review of my work (and I am finding it to be a more obtuse experience than I had expected it would be).

————–

My response was for Tim Hitchcock’s “Academic Writing and its Disconnects” post:  Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Open Peer Reviewing

Defining DH: Tools, Texts and Metaphors

My first inclination in defining the digital humanities is to say that DH goes further than just digitization, and that the purpose of DH is not to compare online texts to those on paper, but to rethink the nature and purposes of scholarly communication and the tools that encircle the processes of learning and the sharing of information—especially now in a computerized, networked era.

The digital humanities seem to be a lens through which we can study the world around us—but also its infrastructures. To look at the tools that we use beyond just how they function on the user level but to try to take them apart and to see them from a variety of vantage points. I think this is part of the beauty of the digital humanities—the ability, as Rafael Alvarado points out, of seeing digital projects as “tools, texts, and metaphors.”

How does one then become a digital humanist? It seems that in a practical sense, that in order to be a DH’er, you must also be something else (first?)—an art historian, someone interested in English perhaps, or a librarian, for example. It seems to me that interdisciplinarity is at the heart of DH, much like in my own field of librarianship.

Although I don’t think I have seen it explicitly iterated in our reading, I also feel that research is at the center of DH. Understanding how and where to find data or how a search engine or database works does seem to be part of DH. Roxanne linked to an article from Inside Higher Ed this week which discussed the connections between Information Literacy (a concept historically tied very closely with librarianship) and DH, which had me comparing the two fields quite a bit—and also wondering how research might be a central component of both fields and yet how they still differ. I think perhaps DH is more focused upon process and projects than systems and organization, but this is something I hope to continue to think about this semester.

Further, in my first paragraph, I used the term “scholarly communication.” I think that DH is involved in picking apart what scholarly communication consists of, and also is realizing that important work and collaboration is being done outside the walls of the academy. I think that DH does speak specifically to scholarship, with the caveat that DH’ers are (or should be) involved in creating more fluid and inviting communities of scholars–outside of old traditions and hierarchies.

Finally, in thinking about defining DH, I’ve also been thinking about the field at this moment. Perhaps since the digital humanities is still a developing field, we might think more about what we want DH to be, rather than documenting what it is or has been. To that end, my hope is that DH can be defined by embracing some of the values that Lisa Spiro describes. One of the most important values that I hope DH continues to embrace (in addition to the collaborative, or “nice” nature), is openness. I think that openness in terms of an approach or a value is important (and especially in welcoming in underrepresented voices/perspectives), but also in a technical or even perhaps pedantic sense—in terms of striving to make DH projects licensed without standard copyright restrictions or according to free software standards so that these projects can be further used, expanded upon and preserved by others. My hope is that through this work toward openness and through further explorations of process and reflection, DH can continue to be a voice advocating for alternatives and discovery.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Defining DH: Tools, Texts and Metaphors

To DH, or not to DH: that is the question.

I do hereby accept DH into my life, for better or worse or really for the future of humanity. At this point and time I define the Digital Humanities as a field of study that includes a collaborative approach to research, knowledge, and access to information by way of technology. I also believe Digital Humanities uses media as a tool to heightened the learning experience. It incorporates the concept of information sharing allowing for true interdisciplinarity and with this our wealth of knowledge can grow beyond the traditional limitations posed by simple text, compartmentalizing our studies. DH expands our abilities for research by allowing for data mining, text extraction and basically quantitative text analysis. One example was discussed in Mathew Wilkens’ chapter on canons and methods etc. we can see how previous research on American literature left out how we can track the frequency of use of American authors in a bibliography within international locations or how we can trace the beginning of American Regionalism before we had originally thought.

While I do think this is all great for research I can’t help but be more excited over how this interactive technology can enhance the learning experience for young people, and how it may be used to stretch our lacking school resources and create a more affordable and sustainable system.

Furthermore, earlier in the week I had been snooping around online to gain better understanding of the type of projects connected to the Digital Humanities and I came across a scholar named Bryan Alexander who is using gaming, digital story telling and open education resources as a support to his teaching. He says he’s “trying to remodel the future of higher education,” which is apparently similar to the majority of DH-er’s in our readings. I see some of these techniques easily translating to our younger learners and may even be able to revolutionize how educators may effectively reach youth with learning incapacities/delays or the average student who lacks sustained attention. The more we use digital resources in curriculum the more we will need to have digital humanities research, to see the efficiency of these media or digitized tools. Alexander, more specifically spoke of how he used an interactive video game to teach students the American experience of Vietnam, I thought this was fascinating. This type of learning where decision-making power is given to a student based on history and political events could make a huge difference in one student’s understanding compared to another who may have kept with the traditional text version. Heck this could do a lot for me in my policy class; I can learn to make decisions as a neo-conservative one-minute and a neo-liberal the next and gain a better understanding for why each makes the decisions they do with regards to education and self interest. If only someone would create this as an interactive game! Okay so I’m venting, oh politics it will be the demise of humanity or the humanities depending how you see it.

Lastly, I want to pose a question, what type of DH projects have come out of, or are currently being worked on within the program at GC?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on To DH, or not to DH: that is the question.

What is Digital Humanities?

What is Digital Humanities?

The truth is that I have more questions than answers to this matter.

 John Unsworth said that DH is “using computational tools to do the work of the humanities”…That tell us of the use of technology in the humanities, but it simplify the DH as a methodology. In the same topic Ernesto Priego says that DH is “The scholarly study and use of computers and computer culture to illuminate the human record.” Once again we fall in an open basic description.

Mark Marino describes DH as “a name that marks a moment of transition…” If DH is only a transition period, why there is such a significant need to consider it a field or a discipline?

Obviously there’s not only one answer. There are clues of what it is but not a certain definition that could enclose the real meaning of it, without falling in an immature, basic, exclusive or too ambitious description.

I think that Digital Humanities is:

  • A paradigm shift that empowers diversity
  • It’s a new way of producing and consuming (information, knowledge)
  • It’s a methodology and at the same time it’s a result
  • Its collaboration and NEGOTIATION
  • It’s a different way of audience engagement and production of knowledge
  • It’s an interdisciplinary field that needs to have a set of rules, or as Lisa Spiro says “values” Those are fundamental in order to define it and validate it.

Many times the answer of what something is or what path is following it’s in the past.

I consider that one of the biggest visionaries in communication theory and mass media was McLuhan. He was able to envision the future of the media by studying the past. “One must remember that Marshall arrived at these conclusions not by hanging around, say, NASA or I.B.M., but rather by studying arcane 16th-century Reformation pamphleteers, the writings of James Joyce, and Renaissance perspective drawings. He was a master of pattern recognition…”  Coupland, Douglas. Marshal McLuhan: You Know Nothing of My Work! Ed Atlas & Company, 2010.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on What is Digital Humanities?