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Archive for September, 2009

Scholar != Island

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

[NINES welcomes graduate fellow Jean Bauer ( Ph.D. Candidate, Corcoran Department of History, University of Virginia) for 2009-2010 school year]

I recently gave a presentation on letters as primary sources — their format, use in historical inquiry in general, role in my dissertation research (and database design) specifically, etc. (My talk was part of an ongoing series called “Original Sources” held on Friday afternoons in the Harrison/Small Library at the University of Virginia.  For more about the series, or to the hear the podcast of my talk, click here.)   In the Q&A session that followed, the organizer, Kelly Miller, asked me one of the now standard questions in digital humanities: “Has the adoption of digital technology changed how humanities scholars see themselves in relationship to their work?”

I was really glad to get the question, because it is one that I have heard many other scholars answer over the years.  The response I have invariably heard is: YES!  Digital technology makes humanities scholars more reliant on other people to get their work done, particularly the programmers who translate their vision into databases and websites, using skills that the scholar frequently does not have or fully understand.  This loss of independence is a source of anxiety to many who work in the field of digital humanities (the level of anxiety varies greatly from scholar to scholar), keeps other scholars from fully exploring the possibilities of new technologies, and can sometimes cause friction between humanities scholars and the technologists they work with.

I see the issue differently.  I don’t think that digital technology has made humanities scholars any more dependent on other people than they were before the “digital revolution.”  Scholarship in the humanities has always been (in my humble opinion) a collaborative process: we complete our first works of scholarship under the watchful eye of thesis and dissertation advisors, workshop early drafts of our papers, participate in conferences, offer to buy our colleagues a cup of coffee if their expertise can shed light on something we’ve become interested in, wrestle with anonymous reviewers and editors to perfect our manuscripts prior to publication, and so on.  We also rely on an army of documentary editors, archivists, and research librarians to organize primary sources and help us find the materials we need.  We return these favors by answering other scholars’ questions and writing the long acknowledgement sections that go at the beginning of our monographs.

After I responded to the question, Mary-Jo Kline (author of the original The Guide to Documentary Editing) gave her opinion that the early adoption of digital tools by libraries (particularly putting finding aids and library catalogues online as well as an increasing percentage of the actual collection) has increased scholars’ tendency to view themselves as working in isolation because now they can locate and/or access so many materials without ever having to enter a library or speak to a librarian.

Of course, adopting digital technology has changed how humanities scholars research, analysis, and publish their scholarship, but not because we’ve fallen from a higher plane of independence.  If anything, we have gained powerful allies in our ongoing struggle to share our work with the world.  If you disagree, then the comments thread is your oyster.

Feedback

Monday, September 21st, 2009

In addition to the blog, we’ve set aside a thread in the NINES Forum for feature suggestions or questions about the site. Have you had trouble finding something in NINES? Are there new ways to work with your data that you’d like us to explore? Sign into your account and head on over to let us know.

New resource in NINES: The Collected Letters of the Wordsworths

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

IntelexThanks to a partnership with the humanities resource provider InteLex, NINES has added the first of several databases from the exceptional Past Masters Series: The Collected Letters of the Wordsworths. This electronic edition includes the collected letters of William, Dorothy and Mary Wordsworth as well as the journals of Dorothy Wordsworth and selected correspondence of Henry Crabb Robinson. Access to the database itself is restricted to those with subscriptions- however NINES users are able to search the full text free of charge.

This resource complements the AHRC-funded From Goslar to Grasmere, making NINES a robust resource for the study of Wordsworth’s life and poetry.

Follow this link to browse the collection in NINES.

New resource: The Letters of Robert Bloomfied and His Circle

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Romantic Circles recently announced a new edition to their site, The Letters of Robert Bloomfied and His Circle, edited by Tim Fulford and Lynda Pratt, with Associate Editor John Goodridge and Technical Editor Laura Mandell. NINES is happy to announce that these letters are now fully searchable within the Collex interface, complete with the accompanying introduction, editorial apparatus and contextual information.

Follow this link to Bloomfield letters in NINES.