Civic Engagement, Teaching, and Digital Humanities
Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 | Margie
I, too, like hearing about the range of projects as well and hope to carry home a much better understanding of digital humanities.
I am looking at the intersection of digital history and civic engagement. I directed public history at Wright State University for eight years and collaborated with area archives, museums, cultural organizations, and schools on various projects. My students and I had initiated a digital exhibit project looking at Dayton and the Miami Valley in the progressive era. Our initial plan, which required my sabbatical and research time over several years as match, became entangled in debates about what constitutes scholarship for promotion. Although this delayed our project, I signed on to beta-test Omeka in hopes that it would provide an alternative to the very expensive, highly produced digital exhibit that we had planned.
The Omeka platform supports some new directions with this work as well. The initial project—while it began with the students, local history partners, and I—would have been largely turned over to a production company. Now, the project may grow more gradually through student input over time or this may lead to a series of smaller, related but more focused projects. Public engagement would have been a feature of the final exhibit project but it may now become an integral aspect of the Omeka-based project. New partnerships with organizations may change the project goals as well.
Beyond the local project, I serve on the Ohio Humanities Council. The OHC has been interested in cultural heritage areas and civic tourism. Tom Sheinfeldt will be in Columbus tomorrow to talk with the OHC and others about Omeka. My thought has been that the OHC could encourage local organizations to do more to engage their audiences and to work with both humanities scholars and local history resources by developing online exhibits and collections using Omeka.
I would also like to talk with others about how humanities disciplines will evaluate work that is digital, interdisciplinary, collaborative, and/or public/applied in the future.
May 19th, 2008 at 7:48 pm
I’ll attend this, and would like to put forward some ideas as to how online communities and civic engagement projects could be augmented by tools like Omeka to develop a research methodology for the digital humanities.
May 29th, 2008 at 9:04 pm
I would be very interested in discussing the topic of digital projects and community outreach/civic engagement. Three years ago I began an on-line database of African-American cemeteries so that descendants could locate their relatives within a tri-county area (in central Virginia). Visit: www.virginia.edu/woodson/projects/aacaac/ I also started a local history blog (www.locohistory.org) to encourage residents to explore county history. I am always interested in new and improved ways to get people interested in the history of their local community.
March 9th, 2010 at 4:08 am
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