Andrew Rouner – THATCamp St. Louis 2013 http://stl2013.thatcamp.org Tue, 19 Nov 2013 19:09:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Beginners in the Digital Humanities http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/2013/11/19/beginners-in-the-digital-humanities/ http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/2013/11/19/beginners-in-the-digital-humanities/#respond Tue, 19 Nov 2013 19:09:20 +0000 http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/?p=274

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On Saturday, November 9, Washington University in St. Louis hosted a lively (and successful?) THATCamp: THATCamp St. Louis, 2013. One of the first sessions combined two suggested topics: “Beginners in the Digital Humanities” and “Subject Librarian DH boot camp,” which I volunteered to co-facilitate with Twyla Gibson. I hope that discussing some of the broad outlines of digital humanities was helpful, but there was a lot to follow-up on. The thin list here leads to pages and resources with pointers to many, many more resources for exploring DH.

Overview of DH

In the “Beginners” session, we discussed some of the broad outlines of digital humanities: the dispute over “hack vs. yack”—the practical creation of tools and resources (especially scholarly digital editions) versus broad theoretical considerations. Within the “hack” camp of DH is another division—not less contentious, but with slightly differing aims and perspectives: scholars involved with scholarly editing (and “digital projects” more broadly) on the one hand, and scholars interested in text mining, on the other. The following are good resources for anyone getting started in DH:

TEI, XML, encoding

Not all XML that might be relevant for faculty members, archivists, librarians and others in cultural heritage organizations is necessarily DH, but certainly deserves mentioning, such as EAD (Encoded Archival Description) for encoding of finding aids, PREMIS for describing objects in a digital preservation environments, and many others! On the other hand, as prevalent as TEI (Text Encoding Initiative) is, it is is also not the only XML standard relevant to DH, as others have grown up out of it, such as the Charters Encoding Initiative (CEI) and EpiDoc, for Epigraphic Document Encoding.

Text Mining

  • Ted Underwood’s The Stone and the Shell blog on Where to start with text mining
  • Steve Ramsay, Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Imperative (theory, but also dealing with text mining)
  • Drew Conway, Machine Learning for Hackers
  • The Metadata Offer New Knowledge (MONK) project

—Andrew Rouner

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STL LAMs http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/2013/11/05/stl-lams/ http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/2013/11/05/stl-lams/#comments Tue, 05 Nov 2013 19:18:04 +0000 http://stl2013.thatcamp.org/?p=223

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A group (TECHO) has been meeting recently about cultural heritage organizations  collaborating through technology, especially sharing content, and has also discussed other ways these organizations could collaborate including i.e. STL/MO participation in DPLA.  What are some of the ways organizations could or should collaborate?  Could there be savings from such collaboration, i.e. in shared infrastructure?  What else could be gained from this kind of collaboration?  What obstacles are there?

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