Mackenzie Brooks
Assistant Professor & Digital Humanities Librarian at Washington and Lee University
Regional Symposium at Scholars' lab March 9, 2018 Mackenzie Brooks // Digital Humanities Librarian
small liberal arts college
1900 undergraduates
~14 librarians
2012 - conversations
2013 - new librarians + formal structure
2013 - ACS grant with UVA
2014 - first DH 101 course
2015 - Mellon grant (4 years)
2018 - minor?!
http://digitalhumanities.wlu.edu
@WLUDH
In ten years, digital humanities projects will be so diffused throughout the curriculum that they no longer look experimental; they gain broad acceptance as a legitimate mode of student work. Student transcripts contain links to their DH projects as part of demonstrated student learning outcomes. Our liberal arts grads possess not only information fluency, but the craft skills to make and manipulate digital artifacts. Parsing large data sets in easily visualized and nuanced ways becomes a normal skill of our humanities grads, along with writing and critical thinking.
- Suzanne Keen, Dean of the College, 2014
Digital Humanities Committee
sets the vision
faculty + library faculty + academic technologists
Digital Humanities Action Team
consults on digital pedagogy + research
librarians + academic technologists
DH Studio = curriculum
DH Fellow position
Incentive grants
Undergraduate Fellowship
Summer research funding
Speaker series
Teaching assistance from UVA
DHSI attendance
Student professional development
Huon d'Auvergne Digital Edition
Florence As It Was
Ancient Graffiti Project
Understanding Human Trafficking
Introduction to Digital Humanities
Data in the Humanities
Programming for Non-Programmers
Born Digital Archives
Public Writing
Innovations in Publishing
Communication through the Web
Scholarly Text Encoding
Digital Culture and Information minor
Space!
Continuing and expanding collaboration
An interdisciplinary program in Digital Culture and Information (DCI) allows students to deeply explore how the digital age impacts knowledge and society. Students will discover how software transforms information into valuable resources as well as the dangerous potential of algorithmically biased tools. Through courses that integrate theory with hands-on practice, students will develop creative projects that demonstrate their emerging expertise in digital media...The course of study nurtures critical reflection on the underlying structure of technology and not merely technical proficiency. A minor in Digital Culture and Information provides the foundation for a career in any field and for life as an informed citizen in a digital society.
By Mackenzie Brooks
Regional Symposium // March 9, 2018
Assistant Professor & Digital Humanities Librarian at Washington and Lee University