Digital Humanities, Libraries, and Partnerships A Critical Examination of Labor, Networks, and Community
Coordonnateurs : Kear Robin, Joranson Kate
Digital Humanities, Libraries, and Partnerships brings forward ideas and reflections that stay fresh beyond the changing technological landscape. The book encapsulates a cultural shift for libraries and librarians and presents a collection of authors who reflect on the collaborations they have formed around digital humanities work. Authors examine a range of issues, including labor equity, digital infrastructure, digital pedagogy, and community partnerships. Readers will find kinship in the complexities of the partnerships described in this book, and become more equipped to conceptualize their own paths and partnerships.
Foreword by Amy Murray TwyningIntroduction: A View on Libraries and Librarians in Digital Humanities by Robin Kear and Kate Joranson
Labor and Roles1. Transforming the Landscape of Labor at Universities through Digital Humanities2. Our Marathon: The Role of Graduate Student and Library Labor in Making the Boston Bombing Digital Archive3. Digital Humanities as Public Humanities: Transformative Collaboration in Graduate Education4. Exploring the Moving Image: The Role of Audiovisual Archives as Partners for Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage Institutions
Networks and Infrastructure5. Old Texts and New Media: Jewish Books on the Move and a Case for Collaboration6. Engaging the Knowledge Commons: Setting Up Virtual Participatory Spaces for Academic Collaboration and Community7. The Role of Responsive Library Makerspaces in Supporting Informal Learning in the Digital Humanities8. Digital Humanities and Image Metadata: Improving Access through Shared Practices9. Stitching Together Technology for the Digital Humanities with the International Image Interoperability Framework
Archives, Community, and History10. Digital Humanities as Community Engagement: The Digital Watts Project11. The Collaborative Project Management Model: Akkasah, an Arab Photography Project12. Starting from the Archives: Digital Humanities Partnerships, Projects, and Pedagogies13. Beans and Cornbread: The Pragmatic Crusade to Document Women’s History through Cookbooks
academic librarians and humanities faculty
Kate Joranson is the Head Librarian at the Frick Fine Arts Library at the University of Pittsburgh. She cultivates engagement with arts collections through curriculum development, research, exhibitions, and collection data projects. Kate has been a librarian for 10 years, and worked as an educator and museum professional prior to her work in libraries. In addition to her MLIS, she earned an MFA in painting and drawing. In her expanded practice as an artist and a librarian, she explores the intersection between discovery and creativity, through collaborative projects such as What Does it Mean to be Curious?, ebrowsing.org, as well as a series of studio projects at katejoranson.com.
- Provides insight into the collaborative relationships among academic librarians and faculty in the humanities
- Documents the current environment, while prompting new questions, research paths and teaching methods
- Examines the challenges and opportunities for the digital humanities in higher education
- Presents examples of collaborations from a variety of international perspectives and educational institutions
Date de parution : 03-2018
Ouvrage de 224 p.
15x22.8 cm
Thème de Digital Humanities, Libraries, and Partnerships :
Mots-clés :
Academic library partnerships; Akkasah; Altac; Alternative Academic Careers; And museum (GLAMs); Arab photography; Archive; Archives; Boston Marathon bombings; Collaboration; Community building; Cookbooks; Cross-divisional collaboration; Crowdsourcing; Digital archives; Digital commons; Digital humanities; Digital literacy; Digital scholarship; Faculty; Film archives; Gallery; Graduate education; History of the book; Inquiry-based learning; Institutional repositories; International image interoperability framework (IIIF); Interoperability; Jewish studies; Knowledge commons; Labor; Libraries; Library; Liminal spaces; Literary studies; Los Angeles history; Makerspaces; Mapping; Metadata; Mirador; Mississippi Community Cookbook Project; Moving images; NYU Libraries; Networking; New York University Abu Dhabi Library; Outreach; Participatory culture; Pedagogy; Photography archive; Preservation; Provenance; Public humanities; Racism; Radical collaboration; Social justice; Special collections; Transformative collaboration; Undergraduate research; Visual material; Visualization