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Scholarly Communication in the Digital Humanities

Scholarly Communication in the Digital Humanities . Spencer D. C. Keralis Director for Digital Scholarship, Research Associate Professor Digital Scholarship Co-Operative University of North Texas @ hauntologist spencer.keralis@unt.edu. Consider the Radarange. ELECTRONICS AGAIN

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Scholarly Communication in the Digital Humanities

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  1. Scholarly Communication in the Digital Humanities Spencer D. C. Keralis Director for Digital Scholarship, Research Associate Professor Digital Scholarship Co-OperativeUniversity of North Texas @hauntologistspencer.keralis@unt.edu

  2. Consider the Radarange ELECTRONICS AGAIN Broadcasting, Telecasting (Archive: 1945-1957)31. 16 (Oct 21, 1946): 198

  3. Consider the Radarange RADIATION LEAK LAID TO 6 HOSPITAL OVENS Special to The New York Times. New York Times (1923-Current file); May 24, 1969; ProQuestHistorical Newspapers: The New York Times (1851-2009) with Index (1851-1993) pg. 33

  4. [After] World War II … the food industry [took] aim at home cooking per se, rapturously envisioning a day when all contact between the cook and the raw makings of dinner would be obsolete.” The 1950’s Laura Shapiro. Something From the Oven: Reinventing Dinner in 1950s America. (New York: Viking, 2004), xviii-xix

  5. …the Digital Humanities take aim at literary study per se, rapturously envisioning a day when all contact between the scholar and the text would be obsolete. The 2010’s Fast forward and switch fields…

  6. Boom. The Mark-21 Nuclear Bomb, 1955

  7. Show Me the Money “institutional support for digital humanities by administrators, foundations, and legislators can work to conceal or compensate for reduced support given to the traditional humanities, and as such can contribute to the undermining of the liberal arts in higher education.” Richard Grusin“The Dark Side of the Digital Humanities – Part 2”http://www.c21uwm.com/2013/01/09/dark-side-of-the-digital-humanities-part-2/

  8. The Dark Side of DH Digital Humanities is: insufficiently diverse. suffers from “techno-utopianism” and “claims to be the solution for every problem.” “a blind and vapid embrace of the digital” insists upon coding and gamification to the exclusion of more humanistic practices. detache[d] from the rest of the humanities (regarding itself as not just “the next big thing,” but “the only thing”). complicit with the neoliberal transformation of higher education; it “capitulates to bureaucratic and technocratic logic”; support[ed by] comes administrators who see DH’ers as successful fundraisers and allies in the “creative destruction” of humanities education. On ‘The Dark Side of the Digital Humanities’ January 5, 2013, 11:14 am, Chronicle of Higher Education By William Pannapacker

  9. The Challenges Monograph remains the gold standard for Humanities Scholarship Suspicion of Open Access Primacy of Citation Analysis for understanding impact Collaboration Devalued/Discouraged How to Support Unfunded Projects The Humanities Payoff?

  10. Make it work. http://academictimgunn.tumblr.com/

  11. Interventions • Outreach for Repository Services • Evangelize Open Access • e-Journal Support • Citations and Readership • Larger “Publics” for Scholarship • Evangelize Altmetrics • Networks of Scholarship • Influence and Impact beyond Citation • Collaboration on DH Projects beyond mass digitization & special collections

  12. The Domain of Information Sciences: • Metadata • Controlled Vocabularies • Long-term preservation • Infrastructure • Discoverability • Accessibility • Reuse • Sustainability • Centrality/Neutrality

  13. Digital Humanatees http://manateestrategy.tumblr.com/

  14. UNT’sDigital ScholarshipCo-Operatifve(DiSCo) http://disco.unt.edu @UNTDiSCo disco@unt.edu

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