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How Did They Make That? #12

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evanwill opened this issue May 6, 2019 · 19 comments
Open

How Did They Make That? #12

evanwill opened this issue May 6, 2019 · 19 comments

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@evanwill
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evanwill commented May 6, 2019

Share DH projects of interest here for afternoon discussion on Day 2.
We will work together to explore the data, people, tools, and outputs of the project.

@bstack89
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bstack89 commented May 14, 2019

Spatial History

A kind of website I would like (my department/grad cohort) to imitate: Stanford Spatial History Project

@evanwill
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Markdown!!

@rbaldridge91
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I gotta go for that extra credit!

One website that has interested me for a while: https://www.splcenter.org/hate-map

Contains lots of constantly changing information (at least from when I have checked it out). But I also enjoy their visual approach for presenting the data.

@KEichner
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Storymaps!

London's lost river

@erindawnjames
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erindawnjames commented May 14, 2019

Collective Biographies of Women

This site compiles biographies of women to compare versions of the same life across decades.

Collective Biographies of Women

@erindawnjames
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Reading Like a Victorian

This is a neat pedagogical tool that allows you to read serialized Victorian novels as they were originally published.

Read Like a Victorian

@KEichner
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Historic Jamestowne

They sort of have everything here... archaeology collections, map based site tour, exhibits

@jsataraka
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jsataraka commented May 14, 2019

DH Project

A day in the queer life of Asian Pacific America

  • Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center

@mollyrcarney
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Well I don't know if I have a favorite digital humanities project yet, but Çatalhöyük was the first major digital archaeological project (that I know of), and is still running today. If you go to the Research Portal you can access the database, field notes, excavator diaries, films, and truly trace the project across time.

@evanwill
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COINS

such a fun way to access boring data

@evanwill
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Historical Tale Construction

fun with tapestries (also, it is a recovered project...)

@owikle
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owikle commented May 14, 2019

Willa Cather Archive

@KEichner
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Virtual Artifact Catalogs

Kooskia Internment Camp
Japanese Comparative Collection

@mollyrcarney
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The past couple of days many of my archaeology friends were jazzed about mapping Tongva traditional places across the greater LA area.

@erindawnjames
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erindawnjames commented May 14, 2019

Book Traces

This project helps to conserve unique copies of 19th- and early 20th-century books on library shelves that would otherwise be destroyed. It documents things that readers have left in library books, such as pictures, letters, flowers, and locks of hair. Be sure to contribute if you find something neat in a dusty library book.

Book Traces

@owikle
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owikle commented May 14, 2019

Petrarchive

An edition of Petrarch’s songbook

@KEichner
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Smithsonian: Human Origins

Like this one because they have a number of virtual exhibits
fossil finds
snap shots in time

@alexmerrill
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I think IIIF and all of its constituent projects are pretty cool:

@KEichner
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forgotten no longer

A mix of 3D visualization, story maps, videos, etc.

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