Mareike König definiert die Digital Humanities als eine Fachdisziplin, die zwischen der Informatik und den Geisteswissenschaften verortet ist. Die Techniken, Methoden und Medien der Digital Humanities werden dabei genutzt, um geisteswissenschaftliche Fragestellungen zu beantworten. Doch wie werden die Digital Humanities in der Praxis sichtbar? Was schließen die Digital Humanties ein? Wie ist der Forschungsstand der mehr oder weniger neuen Fachdisziplin zu beschreiben? Dieses Dossier versucht Antworten auf diese Fragen zu geben und sammelt daher Mitschnitte entsprechender Tagungen, Masterclasses und übrige Beiträge.
Doing Digital Scholarship offers a self-guided introduction to digital scholarship, designed for digital novices. It allows you to dip a toe into a very large field of practice. It starts with the basics, such as securing web server space, preserving data, and improving your search techniques. It then moves forward to explore different methods used for analyzing data, designing digitally inflected teaching assignments, and creating the building blocks required for publishing digital work.
The following taxonomy of DH research activities and objects has been developed for use by community-driven sites and projects that aim to structure information relevant to digital humanities and make it more easily discoverable. The taxonomy is expected to be particularly useful to endeavors aiming to collect information on digital humanities tools, methods, projects, or readings.
The taxonomy is structured into several broad goals which roughly correspond to phases of the research process. Inside each of these domains, we indicate a closed list of methods, which refer to activities within the scope of the broader goal; they specify what is being done, but do not indicate how. Methods are determined by research questions. Although this is a closed list, it may be periodically revised.
This is figure is lays out different digital research tools and resources. It is meant for people looking to discover new tools for research, publication, and dissemination.
online version: http://scalar.usc.edu/works/digital-research-resources/index
On this website you can discover an array of historical salutations. When you found a matching ending for your e-mail you can easily copy it by clicking on the “quote me!”-button and then paste it at the end of your e-mail. If you don’t like the displayed salutation just click on “New Greeting” and you get another one that might fit the bill. To help you finding the fitting quote you can use the filter function.
We publish novice-friendly, peer-reviewed tutorials that help humanists learn a wide range of digital tools, techniques, and workflows to facilitate research and teaching. We are committed to fostering a diverse and inclusive community of editors, writers, and readers.
a community resource guide to data curation in the digital humanities
The DH Curation Guide is a compilation of articles that address aspects of data curation in the digital humanities. The goal of the DH Curation Guide is to direct readers to trusted resources with enough context from expert editors and the other members of the research community to indicate to how these resources might help them with their own data curation challenges.
Each article provides a short introduction to a topic and a list of linked resources. Structuring articles in this way acknowledges the many excellent resources that already exist to provide guidance on subjects relevant to curation such as data formats, legal policies, description, and more.
The Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School is the University of Oxford's annual training event for the Digital Humanities. Each delegate follows a week-long workshop and supplements this with additional parallel lectures, which have been filmed as part of this series.
use Hypothesis to discuss, collaborate, organize your research, or take personal notes
siehe dazu z.B. auch https://hypothes.is/blog/better-tech-via-annotation/
Definition von eHumanities / Digital Humanities: „Die eHumanities verstehen sich als Summe aller Ansätze, die durch die Erforschung, Entwicklung und Anwendung moderner Informationstechnologien die Arbeit in den Geisteswissenschaften erleichtern oder verbessern wollen.“
The DiRT Directory is a registry of digital research tools for scholarly use. DiRT makes it easy for digital humanists and others conducting digital research to find and compare resources ranging from content management systems to music OCR, statistical analysis packages to mindmapping software.
RIDE aims to direct attention to digital editions and to provide a forum in which expert peers criticise and discuss the efforts of digital editors in order to improve current practices and advance future developments.
Im Cologne Center for eHumanities (CCeH) finden sich alle Bereiche der Philosophischen Fakultät der Universität zu Köln zusammen, die moderne Informationstechnologien in Forschung und Lehre anwenden und weiterentwickeln.
Es unterstützt die Fächer und Einrichtungen dabei, methodische und technische Kompetenzen auszubauen und die zahlreichen Projekte und Forschungschwerpunkte in einer gemeinsamen Infrastruktur zusammenzuführen, um ihre Sichtbarkeit und Effizienz zu steigern.
Als vertraglicher Kooperationspartner der Nordrhein-Westfälischen Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Künste (NRW-AWK) betreut das CCeH darüberhinaus landesweit von der Akademie getragene Forschungs- und Editionsprojekte.
Zudem betreut das CCeH das Kölner Datenzentrum für die Geisteswissenschaften (Data Center for the Humanities – DCH).
Lehr- und Schulungsmaterialien zu einzelnen Disziplinen und Werkzeugen aus den digitalen Geisteswissenschaften, Videotuturials zum Umgang mit bestimmten Werkzeugen, Lehrveranstaltung- oder Workshop begleitende How-Tos, Guidelines, Skripte oder Internationale Webinare usw.
This site aims to give the background to, and rationale for, our vision of building a low cost, sustainable, Open Access future for the humanities. Please feel free to look around the site and get in touch if you'd like to be involved.