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Debates in the Digital Humanities. The book, in fact, went through three distinct stages of peer review, each of which required separate revisions: the first and most innovative process was a semipublic peer-to-peer review, in which contributors commented on one another’s work.

Debates in the Digital Humanities

Essays then went through an editor’s review, which was followed finally by a traditional blind review administered by the press. DH Syllabi - CUNY Academic Commons. From CUNY Academic Commons DH Programs The following institutions have DH MA programs.

DH Syllabi - CUNY Academic Commons

LIB607: Issues in Digital Scholarship. LIB 607: Issues in Digital Scholarship Winter 2013Instructor: John RussellTime: Mondays, 9-11:50 amLocation: Knight Library, LIB 122 (Collaboration Center) This course will help graduate students navigate the many forms of digital scholarship as practiced today, as well as help students imagine new forms of digital scholarship appropriate to their research and/or their chosen academic discipline.

LIB607: Issues in Digital Scholarship

The emphasis will be on exploring tools and examples of digital scholarship and thinking critically about the work - both theoretical and practical - being done. Journal of Digital Humanities. Debates in the Digital Humanities. We're delighted to announce version 1.1 of the DHDebates platform, which includes a number of new features: Account creation and basic profile editing Commenting on sentences for anonymous and logged in users Display of comment counts per paragraph for the text JSON APIs for read-only access to the database These features provide a number of ways for readers of the text to interact with the book.

Debates in the Digital Humanities

We're especially excited about the comment system, which allows for wide-ranging dialogue in response to the texts included in the book, and we're very excited to debut a set of APIs, which we hope DHers will use to examine reader interactions with the texts in the volume. Please stay tuned for continued development of the platform. We're also looking forward to debuting a set of new texts and a call for new new submissions, both coming in August 2013.

As always, we look forward to your responses and to your feedback on these new features. Journal of Interactive Humanities. The RIT Libraries are part of the scholarly enterprise at Rochester Institute of Technology that supports open and free access to information. The open access, peer-reviewed journals are published by the RIT Libraries as an academic publishing alternative and as another venue to showcase RIT scholarship. For more information regarding an RIT Libraries’ open access published journal, please contact Nick Paulus, njpwml@rit.edu or 585.475.7934. If you are interested in publishing print journals in addition to online open access journals, please contact Amelia Hugill-Fontanel, Production Editor, RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press, ahfwml@rit.edu or 585.475.6766. From Russia with Love From Russia with Love is a multifaceted Symposium that aims to support RIT Strategic Plan which underscores the importance of creating “enhanced opportunities for cross-cultural understanding and global awareness.”

Please scroll down beyond the Cover Image to see the links to the Program and Symposium abstracts. Multi. Mining of Massive Datasets. The book has a new Web site www.mmds.org.

Mining of Massive Datasets

This page will no longer be maintained. Your browser should be automatically redirected to the new site in 10 seconds. The book has now been published by Cambridge University Press. The publisher is offering a 20% discount to anyone who buys the hardcopy Here. By agreement with the publisher, you can still download it free from this page. --- Jure Leskovec, Anand Rajaraman (@anand_raj), and Jeff Ullman Download Version 2.1 The following is the second edition of the book, which we expect to be published soon.

There is a revised Chapter 2 that treats map-reduce programming in a manner closer to how it is used in practice, rather than how it was described in the original paper. Version 2.1 adds Section 10.5 on finding overlapping communities in social graphs. Download the Latest Book (511 pages, approximately 3MB) Digital Research in the Arts and Humanities. JIH 2013 : The Journal of Interactive Humanities. The Journal of Interactive Humanities is a new peer-reviewed, open access journal that provides an important forum for the development of new methods of outreach and scholarship within the digital humanities, such as interactive games and media for museums, digitized collections, cultural heritage preservation, and interactive narrative.

The humanities have begun to embrace digital technology as a means of expressing scholarship and thought. However, it has become apparent that humanities content cannot simply be transferred into these new media. The humanities may be making the mistake it has observed of other fields: “Part of the problem seems to lie in our faith that somehow technology itself, like miraculous new medical equipment for seeing inside the human body, will solve our problems…” (Tuman, Myron C.

Word Perfect: Literacy in the Computer Age. Univ of Pittsburgh Press, 1992.) Submission deadline June 28 Publication Dates August 28. Digital Arts and Humanities Bibliography. Amazon. Amazon. Amazon. Summer 2011. Managing 100 Digital Humanities Projects: Digital Scholarship & Archiving in King’s Digital Lab James Smithies, King's College London; Carina Westling, King's College London; Anna-Maria Sichani, King's College London; Pam Mellen, King's College London; Arianna Ciula, King's College London Modelling Medieval Hands: Practical OCR for Caroline Minuscule Brandon W.

Summer 2011

Hawk, Rhode Island College; Antonia Karaisl, Rescribe Ltd; Nick White, Rescribe Ltd Towards 3D Scholarly Editions: The Battle of Mount Street Bridge Costas Papadopoulos, Maastricht University; Susan Schreibman, Maastricht University Music Scholarship Online (MuSO): A Research Environment for a More Democratic Digital Musicology Timothy C. DH2018: A Space to Build Bridges Molly Nebiolo, Northeastern University; Gregory J.

Velvet Evolution: A Review of Lev Manovich's Software Takes Command (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013) Alan Bilansky, University of Illinois. Where material book culture meets digital humanities » Wynken de Worde. Below is the text from a talk I gave at the Geographies of Desire conference, held at the University of Maryland on April 27-28.

where material book culture meets digital humanities » Wynken de Worde

Almost everything that I said there is something that I’ve said here before, so faithful readers won’t find much that’s new. But I promised I’d stick it up here, so here it is! If you’re simply looking for the set of links to the resources I mentioned, you can find those on Pinboard. I haven’t included all of my slides here, but you can find those here. I haven’t included all my ad-libbing either, but you would have had to have been there for that. eResearch and Digital Humanities: a broader vision? Digital Heat: Vast underground machines run by downtrodden humanists power 'Metropolis.

eResearch and Digital Humanities: a broader vision?

I have been having many conversations with people of late around the boundaries of ‘eResearch’ and ‘Digital Humanities’. And I have received lots of divergent and interesting responses from both researchers and professionals working in various ways with computing in the humanities. Digital Humanities Now. The Cologne Dialogue on Digital Humanities 2012.