Digital Humanities for Librarians

The flagship journals in the field are gold open access, the most important projects in the field are freely available online, open data is a growing aspect of the field and encouraged by the National Endowment for the Humanities Office of Digital Humanities (NEH-ODH), monographs and edited volumes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of education for library and information science 2022, Vol.63 (1), p.116-117
1. Verfasser: Keralis, Spencer D.C
Format: Review
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The flagship journals in the field are gold open access, the most important projects in the field are freely available online, open data is a growing aspect of the field and encouraged by the National Endowment for the Humanities Office of Digital Humanities (NEH-ODH), monographs and edited volumes are increasingly available in open access formats, and there are over one hundred resources available on the Open Educational Resources Commons related to DH. The companion website https://www.dhforlibrarians.com/ (which surprisingly does not require proof of textbook purchase to access), provides links to many of the resources and projects described in the book. Building a syllabus with selections from Matthew Gold and Lauren Klein's (n.d.) pathbreaking Debates in the Digital Humanities series and Dorothy Kim and Jesse Stommel's (2018) Disrupting the Digital Humanities, both of which are available open access from University of Minnesota Press/CUNY and punctum books, respectively, and supplemented with articles from OA journals like Digital Humanities Quarterly (http://digitalhumanities. org/dhq/), will provide you and your students with a more nuanced view of this diverse field at a fraction of the cost.
ISSN:0748-5786
2328-2967
DOI:10.3138/jelis-2020-0026