Examples from prior PRAXIS mapping projects

We’ll talk about the theory and practice of mapping extensively today, and we’ll look at some really compelling examples to guide us. I thought, however, that focusing exclusively on “industrial-grade” projects undertaken by teams of seasoned researchers (and sometimes teams of programmers and cartographers) might produce anxiety and give a false sense of our goals for this project.

So I’m linking to a few prior projects (from 2020). What’s valuable here is that each post includes a link or image of a finished map as well as a reflection on the process/product. This combination has several benefits for us:

  • we can see what we’re aiming at in terms of ambition and scale in the actual object we’re buildling
  • through the reflections, we can grasp why the student chose the platform and approach they worked with
  • likewise, we learn what kinds of work/expertise were involved (some refer to prior knowledge of JavaScript, for example, whereas others state plainly that they wanted a simple tool)
  • perhaps most important, we learn about false starts, dead ends, detours, and failures
  • finally, we have some good models of how to write the blog post itself, which is part of the assignment.

With no further ado, here are a few examples:


Borges on mapping

Reading for class this week, I kept thinking of the wonderful story fragment “On Exactitude in Science” by the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges. In that story, Borges creates a made-up “discovered” text written by a made-up author from the 17th century reviewing the goings-on of a fictional and unnamed Empire. With me so far? The text describes the cartographic mania of that society that culminates in a map of the Empire at a scale of 1:1. We’ll talk about this at the beginning of class, but here’s the short story/fragment in full:

On Exactitude in Science
… In that Empire, the Art of Cartography attained such Perfection that the map of a single Province occupied the entirety of a City, and the map of the Empire, the entirety of a Province. In time, those Unconscionable Maps no longer satisfied, and the Cartographers Guilds struck a Map of the Empire whose size was that of the Empire, and which coincided point for point with it. The following Generations, who were not so fond of the Study of Cartography as their Forebears had been, saw that that vast Map was Useless, and not without some Pitilessness was it, that they delivered it up to the Inclemencies of Sun and Winters. In the Deserts of the West, still today, there are Tattered Ruins of that Map, inhabited by Animals and Beggars; in all the Land there is no other Relic of the Disciplines of Geography.
Suárez Miranda, Viajes de varones prudentes, Libro IV, Cap. XLV, Lérida, 1658

Borges, J. L. 1998. On exactitude in science. P. 325, In, Jorge Luis Borges, Collected Fictions (Trans. Hurley, H.) Penguin Books.

David Leshinski – Blog #1

With this now being my second course that I will be taking in the Digital Humanities space, the thought of defining exactly what it is still seems like something that I couldn’t do if my life depended on it. Going into this field, my first thought of Digital Humanities was that it was a combination of working with data and a whole lot of writing about data. To some extent, I’m sure that could be true, but it doesn’t encapsulate the entire scope of what digital humanities is or what it could be. Today, my idea has shifted sightly on what is but, even then I still don’t believe it covers the field as a whole. The way I look at digital humanities now is simple- using data to represent human activities and using human activities to represent data. It might not be perfect (and it may be completely wrong), but I think it does a decent job.
In the “Torn Apart / Separados” visualization project, we see human activities being represented by digital data. The creators were able to map territories and color code each territory to represent what side of the political spectrum the congressional representative is on. While exploring the site, there are a handful of other visualizations such as one to represent the flow of ICE awards to specific companies throughout the four year span of 2014 – 2018, one to show the ownership of these contracting companies by protected groups such as minorities and women, one to show the banality of ICE Funding using a tree map, one to represent the streams of re-displaced people throughout the United States, and a visualization that gives the contact information for allies where those seeking help can go. While there are portions of the project that are written to provide you with the creators understanding, the main use of this project is created through written code to visualize the data and allow us, the viewer, to explore and come to our own understanding of the ICE activities and funding.
In terms of the “Colored Conventions Project,” we see the latter part of my definition of Digital Humanities- using human activities to represent data. This site is not created by marvelous coding pieces or data visualizations created through Tableau but, is instead a massive archive of real pieces of history. The Colored Conventions Project is a collection of pieces relating to gatherings that were held across the United States and Canada from 1830 until after the Civil War. In this collection, we are able to find pieces of physical data that have been preserved and uploaded into this massive archive. In this example, the data is still humanized, and in its true form. It isn’t aggregated or summarized to draw conclusions, but organized and labeled for us to analysis and learn about. The data is drawn directly from the readings and the images that make up the archive.
Digital Humanities is one of the most unique fields there is. It is filled with creative freedom and expression which makes it hard or near impossible to come down to one definition, just like other forms of art. My understanding of using data to represent human activities and using human activities to represent data may work here, but there are plenty of amazing DH projects out there where this may not be the case.

A Self-Conscious New Discipline. by J. Michell Brito

DH seems like a young discipline. Not in that it hasn’t existed for decades but in that it is now being interrogated and institutionalized in ways it hasn’t before. What interests me most about DH is that for such a young discipline, it is grappling with centuries of criticism while it produces materials and scholarship. DH feel like a very self-conscious discipline. As a new(ish) field still carving out its values and purpose, it is inheriting centuries of criticism and self-reflection done by all other disciplines throughout history. This is good! Being self-conscious, or conscious of its self, does not mean that it is filled with insecure and anxious scholars but rather with people who are forced to interrogate themselves and their world-views, their perspectives, their creations, intentions and their impact in ways that haven’t been done so early before. As Spiro, in “This is Why We Fight:’ Defining the Values of the Digital Humanities,” tell us, DH occupies a place where it is “publicly visible in ways to which we are generally unaccustomed, a scholarship and pedagogy that are bound up with infrastructure in ways that are deeper and more explicit than we are generally accustomed to, a scholarship and pedagogy that are collaborative and depend on networks of people and that live an active, 24-7 life online” (Spiro, 2012).

Another interesting avenue to explore are the flaws in DH: a lack of attention to issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality; a preference for research-driven projects over pedagogical ones; an absence of political commitment; an inadequate level of diversity among its practitioners; an inability to address texts under copyright; and an institutional concentration in well-funded research universities (Gold, 2012). The issues in DH scholarship are not new. These are seemingly ancient problems that any and all scholarship have and will have to deal with. The fact that Digital Humanist are making conscious efforts to interrogate these so early in their development and institutionalization means that, though it will take longer to get to a place where DH will be taken by all academies as also a purely academic discipline, and thus guaranteeing a seat at the tenue table of security and freedom for scholars and builders in institutions, it will no doubt be a richer discipline.

Beginning with learning about, unlearning from and transforming (or decolonizing) the harsh systems in place that limit the lives of people and rob the potential genius of people systematically trapped in under-resourced, marginalized and actively oppressed and disenfranchised communities, addressing these specific communities and focusing on justice, equity and access to DH will inevitably benefit the field like is hasn’t any other before. DH is an experiment in what intentionality can look like in our current world, exactly as it is. DH has much work ahead of itself and much more benefits to deserve.

• To what extent do these sites/projects reflect issues discussed in our readings?

An example of the intentionality of digital humanist to be self-reflective and dedicated to transparency is present in The Early Caribbean Digital Archive site’s description of itself and the materials within. “The materials in the archive are primarily authored and published by Europeans, but the ECDA aims to use digital tools to “remix” the archive and foreground the centrality and creativity of enslaved and free African, Afro-creole, and Indigenous peoples in the Caribbean world.” The “about” section clearly outlines the goals, which are not only to make more accessible the literary history of the Caribbean, but also to implore users–“both scholars of the Caribbean as well as students–to understand the colonial nature of the archive and to use the digital archive as a site of revision and remix for exploring ways to decolonize the archive” (ECDA). This collaborative, transparent and experimental aspect of the digital archives reflects the intentionality of inclusion and openness value of exchange.

(Apologies for the super tardy first blog post. I am still handling the post-storm issues. I shall be fully back on track by next week.)

Intro to DH (entry_0)

The multidisciplinary submissions including reviews on audio projects
found in Reviews in DH demonstrates a form of this expanded field
that is based off of art historian, Rosalind Krauss’ comparison
to “expanded sculpture”. It is a collection of reviews assembled like sculpture. Similar to the “big tent” metaphor,
the Digital Humanities refers to an expanded definition of academia and
scholarship. In contributing reviews to the arts and niches such
as sound/audio art, the review already appears to be successful in
broadening the public’s understanding of both
the arts and the cultural contexts in which they are placed.

While this periodical centers its content around various projects in DH, it
retains the format of a scholastic journal of reviews and is tied by
a quarterly theme — the theme of the latest publication being sound and audio art and/or work.
This seems to me to fall in line with some sort of model that DH critics are asking for.
Meanwhile, the publication offers a home to a wealth of digital humanity projects out there,
and the reviews themselves, like the one reviewing the DH project, “.break.dance”, is a
beautifully poetic, (although somewhat dense in references) piece describing a very
electric, ever-transforming art.

The first sentence of the review was in a way defining in itself for me of art and the humanities. —
“Form is content in .break.dance, and that form is intentionally errant,
to use Edouard Glissant’s term for intentional acts of wandering that are
retrospectively revelatory of the self and its relations” (Proctor, Brittnay L. Review: .break.dance).

Together with this act of wandering and transforming into varying art forms
that question conventional forms of communication and translation, so too the author’s “meditation on the distance between sound and image. The group of projects reviewed by Reviews in DH exemplifies the growing relationship of the humanities towards and with the digital.

Blog Post 1 – Valeria Alderete

Lauren F. Klein and Matthew K. Gold point out that the expanded field of DH includes several project types, methods, and practices. Their description stands true when centering the project/site “Torn Apart/Separados” to define DH, wherein several methods and practices are applied. The project also embraces Stephan Ramsay’s definition of DH, which he argues, must entail “building things.” While Ramsay strays from his original description that specifically called for the use of coding as a critical element in DH work, ultimately choosing the more general term, “building,” “Torn Apart/Separados” is heavily coding based, fitting either of Ramsey’s descriptions. Using “Torn Apart/Separados” as the primary descriptor of DH implies that DH is characterized by interactive and visual elements that are bound to data, information design, tool-building, collaboration, and other methods with an overarching theme of scholarly activism.

Upon entering the site, users are greeted with a brief project description, clearly outlining the “mission” of the project — to expand awareness on “culpability behind the humanitarian crisis of 2018.” The project reveals politicians and the various sectors that help sustain ICE, thus contributing to the humanitarian crisis. Additionally, the “Allies” page, strategically placed after the interactive, informational, and reflection pages of the site, establishes a sense of influence to take action against this humanitarian issue (activism). In doing so, the project touches on the theme of scholarly activism — an important characterization of DH if we are using this project to define the field.

The context of the “Allies” page and the information revealed in the interactive and descriptive pages of the project serve as a tool to users. The design of the site suggests users should explore the pages in the order presented at the top menu: Visualizations, Textures, Reflections, then Allies. This order first presents data and informs users of the project’s topic (Visualizations and Textures), then appeals to their emotions (Reflections), and finally alludes to some form of action in presenting contact details of organizations working to aid victims of the humanitarian crisis (Allies), where the users can use the information presented in previous pages of the project to take action. The tool-building component becomes an important element of DH work when centering this project to define DH.

The project’s interactive elements are the focal point, consuming most of the webpage space and revealing data on user actions such as hover or click. While most, if not all, digital projects – DH or other field – have elements of interactivity, this project reveals structured data and information that follows the scholarly activism theme to expand awareness on the project topic. Binding information and data to these interactive elements and applying design choices to make these interactive elements the focal point of the interface suggests that they too become a definitive factor of the project (and DH).

The project, as outlined in the “credits” page, was a collaborative effort of several team members and contributors. Additionally, the team behind the project called for reflections on the project from other scholars. These reflections are linked in the “credits” page, allowing users to review them – establishing a sense of transparency and applying, again, collaborative approaches to the project. The obvious and subtle efforts of collaboration throughout the project indicate that collaboration is a significant element of DH work.

Colored Conventions Project

One of the most prominent aspects of Digital Humanities is its connectedness and fluidity in multiple social science and humanities-based disciplines. The fusion of digital tools and humanities research optimizes the approach and availability of graduate and scholarly-level projects for the public. It expands the accessibility of knowledge by being available as an open resource in a digital space. Many digital humanities projects invite collaboration which further the conversations that often related to projects connected to activism, awareness, decolonization, and so on.

One such example of a digital humanities project is the Colored Conventions Project (CCP). This project is based on the history of colored conventions that occurred throughout the early to mid 1800s as political organizations that strategized for racial justice. The project acts as not only an archive of digital records but provides exhibits and teaching materials to learn about this history, as well as collaborative projects with artists and other educational institutions to further their outreach of educating the masses of the underrepresented history.

Based on the readings, digital humanists often have conflicting theories and understandings of what it means to be a digital humanist. In “The Digital Humanities Moment by Matthew K Gold, Gold quotes Stephan Ramsay who posits that digital humanists must know how to code and that “if you are not making anything, you are not… a digital humanist.” Gold argues that other digital humanists disagree in that one doesn’t need to build the tools but utilize the tools to share humanities research on a digital plane. CCP is an example of a digital humanities sites that takes advantage of those tools, such as Omeka, Piktochart and Google Maps.

The CCP offers a site for educators by providing resources for professors and exhibits they can share with their class that are created using the previously stated digital tools. What is unique about this project is how they not only tell this history, but also strongly use the movement’s social justice beliefs within their team and formation of the CCP. Not only are they expanding the American history dialogue of underrepresented populations, but being a source of predominantly Black woman who have for so long not had the access to a proliferate organization focused on advocacy for Black lives.

Again, digital humanists can argue over whether the CCP is a digital humanities project on the notion that the aim of this is heavily geared towards educators. Some digital humanists as Gold pointed out, expect accessibility to be public facing. Due to the specificity of the topic of CCP, this site would not be stumbled upon by the average public-facing person, but is specifically designed to be provided to educational professors and academics. It also comes across as a history or virtual museum, which some digital humanists might point out that it is too focused or not welcoming of utilizing various fields. This come from the Big Tent theory, where DH should have non-central relations, whereas I feel CCP starts with a central field and has been influenced by digital tools that portray digital humanities. What this does offer to the evolution of digital humanities is the fight against the diversity issues that were once “ills” amongst DH, by supporting Black voices by Black voices.

Blog 1

1.

I appreciate Ramsay’s comment regarding the ability to code or “build something” as a key consideration in one’s acknowledgement that they are a DH scholar. This struck me as useful in drawing a line in the sand in a field where a “definitional dilemma” seems to rear its head regarding the field from time to time. The problem with this, however, is that the scope of projects available to burgeoning scholars intending to code from the ground up in my view are limited. One could create a “collaboratively built tool that enables other scholars to add descriptive metadata to digitized manuscripts” but would another project really be necessary to practitioners when there is already Hypothesis and Manifold?

And with so many useful text analysis (Voyant), geo-spatial mapping, and data viz tools (Tableau) readily available, why the emphasis on knowing a computer programming language? Maybe the point is to have a working-knowledge of coding. In the same way a Literature major might need to know how to compose a sonnet. They may not be experts in the achievement of this goal, but can create one from the “ground up”. Alternatively can a Philosophy major be considered a scholar if they are unable to write a paper incorporating symbolic logic? It may not fit the end goal of their research which relies perhaps more on the merits of literary value rather than math and an Analytical style.

Maybe the issue of ground-level working knowledge of a skill? Wittgenstein famously came to Cambridge without having read Aristotle, which is very much in line with Keats’ Negative Capability. In the Humanities we don’t have a distinction between working knowledge and technical knowledge the same way other faculties like Social Science might have. A social scientist who can’t run a lab or has difficulty with statistics, seems to fail the tenets of the field, but what does that look like in the Humanities? Would it be one’s ability to mention at the drop of a hat five major themes from Songs of Innocence and Experience? Is a Literature major’s scholarly status docked for not having read Blake?

2.

So DH is a “motley of effort” (Krauss) and since I’m also taking a Pedagogy course this semester I’ve been made aware of two big sectioned off areas of DH. One in which the field makes a commitment to grappling with the fine points of online and hybrid learning in a way that is equitable and caters to the needs of students; the other is one which leans towards public scholarship: “addressing our work not simply to ‘the public’ but also… to specific communities” (Brennan). With social, racial, historical concerns to the fore. Its the explanation and pedagogical utility of DH projects that I feel could benefit from a reevaluation.

At least two of the projects offer an “explore” tab which breaks down the crucial elements of research and offers up the historic reasons for why a project is so vital. These explore tabs are inherent to most DH projects I’ve seen online and go a long way towards reckoning with the issue that ”scholarship that is not always fully legible to those not versed in the particular methods or conversations taking place in that domain”.

If this breakdown of core concepts is such a common occurrence, then it seems to me that; in the same way that there are just a few standards of notation software available that most people have agreed to use, can’t there be a software that organizes these Archive-heavy projects for people? The problem I run into is that, I know that project which perform archival work: gathering documents and organizing them across a timeline are set up the same way. That is, they have sections organized into: Explore, Find out More, Dig Deeper, Outline View modes, etc… Sometimes when I want to quickly switch from one to the other to compare the two, the UI is set up in such a way that I have to flip through pages and pages or differently organized and color-coded navigation views just to have the two side-by-side. I wonder if there isn’t room for a more Unified Approach to Archival Projects.

(Untitled no. 1, aka blog post no. 1)

The realm of DH is appealing for a few reasons, and I would like to outline the following few below. Like any discipline that is going through the process of shaping and constant re-shaping, its frontiers are still fluid and therefore new features or, rather, values are being added and accepted. This is one of the strengths of the discipline: to be open and easily shift to explore novel fields and themes and possibilities—in other words, be inclusive. This philosophy, on the other hand, may lead to having troubles because enduring everything is not probably the most ideal take, and at one point you do need to say: “That’s not fitting in here.”

The field of DH, it seems to me, might benefit when keeps being open but, at the same time, consider establishing some visible boundaries. In this respect, I agree with Matt Kirschenbaum who argues that “the digital humanities today is about a scholarship (and a pedagogy) that is publicly visible in ways to which we are generally unaccustomed, a scholarship and pedagogy that are bound up with infrastructure in ways that are deeper and more explicit than we are generally unaccustomed […].” Interestingly, this was written all the way in 2010 but his points still remain cohesive and valid.

Another feature that is of special note is that DH can quickly react to ongoing debates, unrepresented fields and effectively create responses – i.e., open new platforms – in terms of scholarship and pedagogy. Unsurprising that many ground-breaking projects emerged in recent times and were well-received, these projects were implemented, in part, thanks to DH.

While looking at the digital projects assigned for our next class, all of them feature something special and unique. Torn Apart/Separados is probably the most sophisticated from a technological standpoint, a project that requires lots of attention in terms of tools, but also the research conducted to present this project requires a special note. Early Caribbean Digital Archive is an example of decolonization studies; it effectively combines the work from the past and serves as a library and exhibit but also presents these materials in a way that could be easily used both by scholars in the area but also students. The same concerns Colored Convention Project – and both are open to submissions – meaning, anyone who has any ideas or knowledge in those areas could contribute and share their findings with others. Finally, Digital Humanities in Review is as important as anything else on this list: someone must keep an eye on all novel projects and developments in the field and offer a springboard for constructive feedback and to be able to have a dialogue.

The Digital Humanism of the Early Caribbean Digital Archive

Image

I found the Early Caribbean Digital Archive (ECDA) to be a succinct representation of the many valences in the digital humanities’ expanded field.

The archive participates in some “traditional” motivations of digital humanities. The project follows Ramsey’s urging for digital humanists to “build things” from “Who’s in and Who’s Out.” By creating a digital archive like, the ECDA hues closely to the camp of digital humanists “who use new digital tools to aid relatively traditional scholarly projects” (Gold, 2012). The emphasis on catalogs and manuscripts harkens to an operating mode where DH comprises a set of methods to make traditional archival material more accessible via digital technologies. Moreover, the metaphors used on the EDCA homepage ground the project in the conventional notion of digital humanists that an observer outside of the field might expect. Imperatives like “take a tour,” the categorization of material as “archive” and “exhibits” fall within the tropes of physical museums. The “curated collections” indicate some level of expertise deployed for creating “ new entryways into the archive,” carving out grooves by which a “guest” can navigate or “explore” the archive. These motivations to build a tool for researchers, to digitize archival material, and provide structured guidance – couched in purview of what typical institutions may expect from digital humanities – are visible in how the EDCA frames its project. These motivations go some way to understanding not only why Northeastern University would host this archive, but also the library partnership that the project attracts.

The project’s palatability to institutional forces doesn’t diminish the EDCA’s participation in the more unorthodox practices in DH. Sidestepping the colonial project inherent in these texts goes beyond the preternatural “recombinatory” and nonlinear benefits of digitalization mentioned in the “Decolonizing the Archive: Remix and Reassembly” section of the website. The tagline “is it possible to decolonize the archive?” hints at the experimentation in how the archival material is arranged to try and answer that question. Slave narratives embedded in books written by European colonial authors are broken free from that context in the EDCA “to form a new digital anthology of narratives that speak to one another (beyond the context of the words of Bryan Edwards or similar texts) in new ways and across new contexts.” This reassemblage meshes well with the “constellation of terms…curiosity, play, exploration” that Spiro identifies as experimentation, a unifying value she sees for the DH community. Breaking up these early Caribbean texts also aligns the EDCA (albeit in a very small “c” conservative way) with DH scholars that draw their lineage from McGann and Samuel’s Deformance and Interpretation. By reading a text in reassembled order — backwards, with words removed, or the order of paragraphs, sentences or stanzas reassembled etc. we can generate new knowledge about the text in question, and reveal the structures that undergird it. In the spirit of Spiro’s elevation of collaboration as an inherent DH value, I appreciate that the EDCA curators set the extracted slave narratives in conversation with one another, having those voices collaborate on a new narrative with the potential to