State of the field: digital history

Autor: Stefania Scagliola, James Baker, Julie M. Birkholz, Michel de Gruijter, Albert Meroño-Peñuela, Max Kemman, Ruben Ros, Thorsten Ries, C. Annemieke Romein
Přispěvatelé: Artificial intelligence, Network Institute, Artificial Intelligence (section level), Geschiedenis (HI), Department of History
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
Zdroj: History, 105(365), 291-312. Wiley-Blackwell
HISTORY
History, 105(365), 291-312. Wiley Online Library
Romein, C A, Kemman, M, Birkholz, J M, Baker, J, De Gruijter, M, Meroño-Peñuela, A, Ries, T, Ros, R & Scagliola, S 2020, ' State of the Field : Digital History ', History, vol. 105, no. 365, pp. 291-312 . https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-229X.12969
Ghent University Academic Bibliography
ISSN: 0018-2648
1468-229X
DOI: 10.1111/1468-229X.12969
Popis: Computing and the use of digital sources and resources is an everyday and essential practice in current academic scholarship. The present article gives a concise overview of approaches and methods within digital historical scholarship, focussing on the question: How have the Digital Humanities evolved and what has that evolution brought to historical scholarship? We begin by discussing techniques in which data are generated and machine searchable, such as OCR/HTR, born-digital archives, computer vision, scholarly editions, and Linked Data. In the second section, we provide examples of how data is made more accessible through quantitative text and network analysis. We close with a section on the need for hermeneutics and data-awareness in digital historical scholarship.\ud \ud The technologies described in this article have had varying degrees of effect on historical scholarship, usually in indirect ways. For example, technologies such as OCR and search engines may not be directly visible in a historical argument; however, these technologies do shape how historians interact with sources and whether sources can be accessed at all. It is with this article that we aim to start to take stock of the digital approaches and methods used in historical scholarship which may serve as starting points for scholars to understand the digital turn in the field and how and when to implement such approaches in their work.
Databáze: OpenAIRE