proposed by Stewart Varner and Erin White
Some questions we have about using the internet to support research:
- What rumors have you heard?
- Never do it. You won’t get tenure.
- You need to learn it ’cause we need to justify our existence as a library.
- There’s no point because in 10 years it won’t work.
- It’s just a fad.
- All the datasets are available already! Everything is out there and complete already.
- It’s in the public domain so it’s free. Right?
- Why do we need a library? We can all just have kindles.
- Digital is scary. We don’t want to be co-opted.
- If students don’t write papers, that’s not scholarship.
- Students are digital natives (false).
- What the hell is digital scholarship, anyway?
- Opportunities of digitization and the web allow for research of rare texts
- What isn’t it? (In libraries especially)
- Publishing: Digital collections, text mining, scholarly publications
- Teaching: Pedagogy, teaching
- Making the argument vs. doing the research
- The space between…
- Compare it to ink/analog scholarship? Or see it as a hybrid, complement to “real-life”/work with physical objects
- What’s the big deal?
- Associations are creating guidlines for evaluating digital work (MLA, AHA)
- Should not reduce the conversation to digital vs. analog. Does not have to be one or the other all the time.
- Using the humanities to critique technological questions
- Systems are not neutral (i.e. binary gender choices on web forms)
- Critique of “how it’s been done” – historical defaults are hard to change
- Even maps are opinionated/not neutral
- Ideas for the future
- Directory of digital scholarship – a catalog of projects
- How do we use technology to support, disseminate, and transform research?
- It’s expected. “Digital natives” – maybe not so tech savvy, but have expectations of technology and online availability
- Partnerships – what relationships should we build?
- Should we rely only on grants to pursue Big Digital Projects? Or is small okay too?
- What are some examples of digital scholarship that have had staying power?
- Should it matter?
- Can scholarly work can be ephemeral? What happens when things break? Citation is important. How can you establish provenance?
- We need to think about sustained effort for some of these things; it’s not just published and put on a shelf.
- Creates a crisis in trust.
- Digital Preservation is a serious problem and expensive to solve.
- Should we have a suite of reusable tools rather than bespoke, one-off web projects?
- Should digital preservation be part of the creation process.
- Reusable tools are useful
- Identify and support stable formats and open access.
- Readings
- Moretti – Graphs, maps and trees
- Gold, ed. – Debates in Digital Humanities