Fr. 69.00

Digital Humanities - Implications for Librarians, Libraries, and Librarianship

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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The digital humanities in academic institutions, and libraries in particular, have exploded in recent years. Librarians are constantly developing their management and technological skills and increasing their knowledge base. As they continue to embed themselves in the scholarly conversations on campus, the challenges facing subject/liaison librarians, technical service librarians, and library administrators are many.

This comprehensive volume highlights the wide variety of theoretical issues discussed, initiatives pursued, and projects implemented by academic librarians. Many of the chapters deal with digital humanities pedagogy-planning and conducting training workshops, institutes, semester-long courses, embedded librarian instruction, and instructional assessment-with some chapters focusing specifically on applications of the "ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education." The authors also explore a wide variety of other topics, including the emotional labor of librarians; the challenges of transforming static traditional collections into dynamic, user-centered, digital projects; conceptualizing and creating models of collaboration; digital publishing; and developing and planning projects including improving one's own project management skills. This collection effectively illustrates how librarians are enabling themselves through active research partnerships in an ever-changing scholarly environment.

This book was originally published as a special triple issue of the journal College & Undergraduate Libraries.

List of contents

1. Introduction: The digital humanities: Implications for librarians, libraries, and librarianship  Part I: Theoretical and Critical Perspectives  2. Evaluating the landscape of digital humanities librarianship  3. Claiming expertise from betwixt and between: Digital humanities librarians, emotional labor, and genre theory  Part II: Transforming Material Collections  4. The Rosarium Project: A case of merging traditional reference librarian skills with digital humanities technology  5. Subject librarian as coauthor: A case study with recommendations  6. Experiencing medieval manuscripts using touch technology  7. Creating digital knowledge: Library as open access digital publisher  Part III: Models of Collaboration  8. Developing collaborative best practices for digital humanities data collection: A case study  9. Digital humanities and the emerging framework for digital curation  10. Against the grain: Reading for the challenges of collaborative digital humanities pedagogy  Part IV: Planning and Project Management  11. They think all of this is new: Leveraging librarians' project management skills for the digital humanities  12. "A community of common descent": Planning the documentation of diaspora through the Electronic Irish Research Experience  13. Project management for digital projects with collaborators beyond the library  14. Community-Enhanced Repository for Engaged Scholarship: A case study on supporting digital humanities research  15. Building an ethical digital humanities community: Librarian, faculty, and student collaboration  16. So what are you going to do with that?: The promises and pitfalls of massive data sets  17. Digitizing more for less: Digital preservation at The College of New Jersey  Part V: ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education  18. Spatial information literacy for digital humanities: The case study of leveraging geospatial information for African American history education  19. Visualizing oral histories: A lab model using multimedia DH to incorporate ACRL framework standards into liberal arts education  20. Conversation as a model to build the relationship among libraries, digital humanities, and campus leadership  21. From service to synergy: Embedding librarians in a digital humanities project  Part VI: Embedded Librarian Instruction  22. Shifting expectations: Revisiting core concepts of academic librarianship in undergraduate classes with a digital humanities focus  23. Teaching TEI to undergraduates: A case study in a digital humanities curriculum  24. Faculty-library collaborations in digital history: A case study of the travel journal of Cornelius B. Gold  25. A subject librarian's pedagogical path in the digital humanities  26. Beyond the one-shot: Intensive workshops as a platform for engaging the library in digital humanities  27. The Digital Humanities Summer Scholarship: A model for library-led undergraduate digital scholarship  28. Practitioners as professors: Experiential learning in the distance digital liberal arts classroom  29. GIS and the humanities: Presenting a path to digital scholarship with the Story Map app  30. Reading in the digital age: A case study in faculty and librarian collaboration  31. Process and collaboration: Assessing digital humanities work through an embedded lens

Summary

This book highlights the wide variety of theoretical issues discussed, initiatives pursued, and projects implemented by academic librarians. It illustrates how they are enabling themselves through active research partnerships in an ever-changing scholarly environment. It was first published as a special issue of College & Undergraduate Li

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