Credit where credit is due: how digital scholarship is changing history & what the American Historical Association is doing about it Dr. Seth Denbo Director of Scholarly Communication & Digital Initiatives American Historical Association @seth_denbo
Paul’s Churchyard, looking east, from the west. From the Visual Model, constructed by Joshua Stephens, rendered by Jordan Gray. https://vpcp.chass.ncsu.edu/churchyard/view/beyond text
data
Kate Bagnall and Tim Sherratt, Invisible Australians, invisibleaustralians.org
Gregory P. Downs & Scott Nesbit, Mapping Occupation: Force, Freedom, and the Army in Reconstruction, http://mappingoccupation.org
Dust storm approaching Stratford, Texas. April 18, 1935. NOAA George E. Marsh Album. www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/theb1365.htm
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Microcosm_of_London_Plate_058_-_Old_Bailey.jpg
http://criminalintent.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/criminal_intent_digging_into_data_meeting_10jun2011.pdf
Jo Guldi and David Armitage. The History Manifesto. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Lara Putnam. “The Transnational and the Text-Searchable: Digitized Sources and the Shadows They Cast.” The American Historical Review 121, no. 2 (April 1, 2016): 377–402. doi:10.1093/ahr/121.2.377.
Infrastructure
dlaexchange.wordpress.com
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beta.tapasproject.org
“The shared commitment of all historians to the informed and evidence-based conversation that is history can smooth our discipline's integration of new possibilities. With agreement on the purpose of our work, new and varying forms of that work can be seen as strengths rather than impediments.”
http://www.jadh.org/guidelines-for-the-evaluation-of-digital-scholarship-in-history