Going GLAM

Post on 25-May-2015

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Slides from a talk I gave at the HistoryLab+ organised 'Life After the PhD' event at the Institute of Historical Research, 5 June 2014. Notes at https://gist.github.com/drjwbaker/b84881664c3ae7e34255

transcript

Going GLAMDr James BakerCurator, Digital Research

@j_w_baker

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Some admin…

You are free to:– Copy, share, adapt, or re-mix– Photograph, film, or broadcast– Blog, live-blog, or post video of;

this presentation provided that:– You attribute the work to its author

and respect the rights and licences associated with its components

– You distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one

Text attribution Greg Wilson, Two Solitudes, SPLASH 2013 (29 October 2013) http://www.slideshare.net/gvwilson/splash-2013

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License unless stated otherwise.

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More than resource discovery…

“The emergence of the new digital humanities isn’t an isolated academic phenomenon. The institutional and disciplinary changes are part of a larger cultural shift, inside and outside the academy, a rapid cycle of emergence and convergence in technology and culture”

Steven E Jones, Emergence of the Digital Humanities (2014)

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“Literary scholars and historians have in the past been limited in their analyses of print culture by the constraints of physical archives and human

capacity. A lone scholar cannot read, much less make sense of, millions of newspaper pages. With the aid of computational linguistics tools and digitized corpora, however, we are working toward a large-scale, systemic understanding of how texts were valued and transmitted during this period”

David A. Smith, Ryan Cordell, and Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, ‘Infectious Texts: Modeling Text Reuse in Nineteenth-Century Newspapers’ (2013) http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/dasmith/infect-bighum-2013.pdf

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‘Early users of medieval books of hours and prayer books left signs of their reading in the form of fingerprints

in the margins. The darkness of their fingerprints correlates to the intensity of their use and handling. A densitometer -- a machine that measures the darkness of a reflecting surface -- can reveal which texts a reader favored.’

Kathryn M. Rudy, ‘Dirty Books: Quantifying Patterns of Use in Medieval Manuscripts Using a Densitometer’, Journal of Historians of Nederlandish Art (2010)

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disciplinecamp and camps sentence

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© Nicola Demonte

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Thank you!@j_w_bakerjames.baker@bl.ukhttp://britishlibrary.typepad.co.uk/digital-scholarship/

Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/drjwbaker/going-glam Notes: https://gist.github.com/drjwbaker/b84881664c3ae7e34255