The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Russell, Isabel Galina; Layne-Worthey, Glen
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The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Russell, Isabel Galina; Layne-Worthey, Glen
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The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities covers a wide range of issues encountered in the world's libraries and archives as they continue to expand their support of, and direct engagement in, DH research and teaching.
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The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities covers a wide range of issues encountered in the world's libraries and archives as they continue to expand their support of, and direct engagement in, DH research and teaching.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040184004
- Artikelnr.: 72298001
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040184004
- Artikelnr.: 72298001
Isabel Galina Russell is a researcher at the Instituto de Investigaciones Bibliográficas at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). Her main research interests are Digital Humanities, libraries and digital collections and digital preservation. She is a founding member of the Red de Humanidades Digitales (RedHD). Glen Layne-Worthey is Associate Director for Research Support Services in the HathiTrust Research Center, based in the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign School of Information Sciences. Formerly, he was Digital Humanities Librarian at Stanford (1997-2019). Both editors have served in leadership roles in the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO).
List of figures; List of contributors; Editors' introduction; Section 1:
Ethical and legal foundations - 1. The Illusion of Everything: Notions of
Completeness in National Digital Collections; 2. Bibliographic Diaspora and
Cultural Heritage; 3. Nimble Tents and Bunkers: The Role of Libraries in
Rapid-Response DH; 4. Bridging Traditional DH and Archives through
Computational Archival Science; 5. The Cruel Optimism of Infrastructure: a
Call to Mend; 6. Infrastructures of Power: Archives as Epistemological
Palimpsests; 7. Copyright Is the Lock; Non-Expressive Fair Use Is the Key:
Research with In-Copyright Texts; Section 2: Collections as data - 8.
Getting Back in the Flow: An Outline For a Semi-Automated Digitization
Workflow to Improve the Quality of Digital Collections; 9. Archival
Collections as Data: A Global View from Japan; 10. Which Collections as
Data? Advancing the Use of External Collections for Digital Scholarship;
11. Libraries, Archives, and the Born-Digital Humanities; 12.Hidden
Patterns: An Introduction to Text Mining for Libraries; 13. Selling Our
Soul (For Total Control)? Linked Open Data and GLAM; 14. Publishing Large
Collections of Digitised Printed Material: the National Library of the
Netherlands; Section 3: Publishing and other public-facing practices -
15.Digital Publishing for Smaller Libraries: the Case of Quire at Pitts
Theology Library; 16.The First World War Letters of H.J.C. Peirs: A Case
Study of the Creation and Growth of a Collaborative, Pedagogy-Driven
Digital History Project; 17.Multidisciplinary Research on Family
Historians: Framing Current Challenges in Cultural Heritage; 18.Preserving
Digital Humanities Projects Using Principles of Digital Longevity; 19. The
Static Advantage: Increased Agility and Sustainability of Static-Web-Driven
Development for Digital Humanities Projects; 20. Integrating Human-Centred
Systems Design into Libraries' Digital Ecosystems; 21. Development of an
IIIF-Compatible Digital Collection and Image Usage Analysis: The Case of
the Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive; Section 4. The
profession and the disciplines - 22. Essential Entanglements: Digital
Preservation and the Digital Humanities; 23. The Information Sciences and
the Digital Humanities: Building an Informational Ecosystem; 24.
Interfacing in the Archive: Making Online Collections Work for and with
Digital Humanities Research; 25. Interdisciplinarity as the Framework for
Transition of Digital to Computational Archive: A Case Study of Digital
Curation; 26. Towards a Framework for Digital Scholarship for Higher
Education; 27. Archival and Artificial Intelligence: A Framework to Connect
Them in Practice; Section 5: DH in Organisations - 28.Leveraging and
Creating Library Structures to Support Online Exhibitions; 29. Digital
Preservation Expertise and Labour Throughout the Project Lifecycle; 30.
Digital Humanities at the Bibliothèque nationale de France: Between Age-Old
Objectives and New Uses; 31. A Nation and its Research: the National
Library of Israel in Two Worlds; 32. Archives, Digital Search, and AI
Ethics; 33. Embedding Digital Humanities in the British Library; Index.
Ethical and legal foundations - 1. The Illusion of Everything: Notions of
Completeness in National Digital Collections; 2. Bibliographic Diaspora and
Cultural Heritage; 3. Nimble Tents and Bunkers: The Role of Libraries in
Rapid-Response DH; 4. Bridging Traditional DH and Archives through
Computational Archival Science; 5. The Cruel Optimism of Infrastructure: a
Call to Mend; 6. Infrastructures of Power: Archives as Epistemological
Palimpsests; 7. Copyright Is the Lock; Non-Expressive Fair Use Is the Key:
Research with In-Copyright Texts; Section 2: Collections as data - 8.
Getting Back in the Flow: An Outline For a Semi-Automated Digitization
Workflow to Improve the Quality of Digital Collections; 9. Archival
Collections as Data: A Global View from Japan; 10. Which Collections as
Data? Advancing the Use of External Collections for Digital Scholarship;
11. Libraries, Archives, and the Born-Digital Humanities; 12.Hidden
Patterns: An Introduction to Text Mining for Libraries; 13. Selling Our
Soul (For Total Control)? Linked Open Data and GLAM; 14. Publishing Large
Collections of Digitised Printed Material: the National Library of the
Netherlands; Section 3: Publishing and other public-facing practices -
15.Digital Publishing for Smaller Libraries: the Case of Quire at Pitts
Theology Library; 16.The First World War Letters of H.J.C. Peirs: A Case
Study of the Creation and Growth of a Collaborative, Pedagogy-Driven
Digital History Project; 17.Multidisciplinary Research on Family
Historians: Framing Current Challenges in Cultural Heritage; 18.Preserving
Digital Humanities Projects Using Principles of Digital Longevity; 19. The
Static Advantage: Increased Agility and Sustainability of Static-Web-Driven
Development for Digital Humanities Projects; 20. Integrating Human-Centred
Systems Design into Libraries' Digital Ecosystems; 21. Development of an
IIIF-Compatible Digital Collection and Image Usage Analysis: The Case of
the Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive; Section 4. The
profession and the disciplines - 22. Essential Entanglements: Digital
Preservation and the Digital Humanities; 23. The Information Sciences and
the Digital Humanities: Building an Informational Ecosystem; 24.
Interfacing in the Archive: Making Online Collections Work for and with
Digital Humanities Research; 25. Interdisciplinarity as the Framework for
Transition of Digital to Computational Archive: A Case Study of Digital
Curation; 26. Towards a Framework for Digital Scholarship for Higher
Education; 27. Archival and Artificial Intelligence: A Framework to Connect
Them in Practice; Section 5: DH in Organisations - 28.Leveraging and
Creating Library Structures to Support Online Exhibitions; 29. Digital
Preservation Expertise and Labour Throughout the Project Lifecycle; 30.
Digital Humanities at the Bibliothèque nationale de France: Between Age-Old
Objectives and New Uses; 31. A Nation and its Research: the National
Library of Israel in Two Worlds; 32. Archives, Digital Search, and AI
Ethics; 33. Embedding Digital Humanities in the British Library; Index.
List of figures; List of contributors; Editors' introduction; Section 1:
Ethical and legal foundations - 1. The Illusion of Everything: Notions of
Completeness in National Digital Collections; 2. Bibliographic Diaspora and
Cultural Heritage; 3. Nimble Tents and Bunkers: The Role of Libraries in
Rapid-Response DH; 4. Bridging Traditional DH and Archives through
Computational Archival Science; 5. The Cruel Optimism of Infrastructure: a
Call to Mend; 6. Infrastructures of Power: Archives as Epistemological
Palimpsests; 7. Copyright Is the Lock; Non-Expressive Fair Use Is the Key:
Research with In-Copyright Texts; Section 2: Collections as data - 8.
Getting Back in the Flow: An Outline For a Semi-Automated Digitization
Workflow to Improve the Quality of Digital Collections; 9. Archival
Collections as Data: A Global View from Japan; 10. Which Collections as
Data? Advancing the Use of External Collections for Digital Scholarship;
11. Libraries, Archives, and the Born-Digital Humanities; 12.Hidden
Patterns: An Introduction to Text Mining for Libraries; 13. Selling Our
Soul (For Total Control)? Linked Open Data and GLAM; 14. Publishing Large
Collections of Digitised Printed Material: the National Library of the
Netherlands; Section 3: Publishing and other public-facing practices -
15.Digital Publishing for Smaller Libraries: the Case of Quire at Pitts
Theology Library; 16.The First World War Letters of H.J.C. Peirs: A Case
Study of the Creation and Growth of a Collaborative, Pedagogy-Driven
Digital History Project; 17.Multidisciplinary Research on Family
Historians: Framing Current Challenges in Cultural Heritage; 18.Preserving
Digital Humanities Projects Using Principles of Digital Longevity; 19. The
Static Advantage: Increased Agility and Sustainability of Static-Web-Driven
Development for Digital Humanities Projects; 20. Integrating Human-Centred
Systems Design into Libraries' Digital Ecosystems; 21. Development of an
IIIF-Compatible Digital Collection and Image Usage Analysis: The Case of
the Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive; Section 4. The
profession and the disciplines - 22. Essential Entanglements: Digital
Preservation and the Digital Humanities; 23. The Information Sciences and
the Digital Humanities: Building an Informational Ecosystem; 24.
Interfacing in the Archive: Making Online Collections Work for and with
Digital Humanities Research; 25. Interdisciplinarity as the Framework for
Transition of Digital to Computational Archive: A Case Study of Digital
Curation; 26. Towards a Framework for Digital Scholarship for Higher
Education; 27. Archival and Artificial Intelligence: A Framework to Connect
Them in Practice; Section 5: DH in Organisations - 28.Leveraging and
Creating Library Structures to Support Online Exhibitions; 29. Digital
Preservation Expertise and Labour Throughout the Project Lifecycle; 30.
Digital Humanities at the Bibliothèque nationale de France: Between Age-Old
Objectives and New Uses; 31. A Nation and its Research: the National
Library of Israel in Two Worlds; 32. Archives, Digital Search, and AI
Ethics; 33. Embedding Digital Humanities in the British Library; Index.
Ethical and legal foundations - 1. The Illusion of Everything: Notions of
Completeness in National Digital Collections; 2. Bibliographic Diaspora and
Cultural Heritage; 3. Nimble Tents and Bunkers: The Role of Libraries in
Rapid-Response DH; 4. Bridging Traditional DH and Archives through
Computational Archival Science; 5. The Cruel Optimism of Infrastructure: a
Call to Mend; 6. Infrastructures of Power: Archives as Epistemological
Palimpsests; 7. Copyright Is the Lock; Non-Expressive Fair Use Is the Key:
Research with In-Copyright Texts; Section 2: Collections as data - 8.
Getting Back in the Flow: An Outline For a Semi-Automated Digitization
Workflow to Improve the Quality of Digital Collections; 9. Archival
Collections as Data: A Global View from Japan; 10. Which Collections as
Data? Advancing the Use of External Collections for Digital Scholarship;
11. Libraries, Archives, and the Born-Digital Humanities; 12.Hidden
Patterns: An Introduction to Text Mining for Libraries; 13. Selling Our
Soul (For Total Control)? Linked Open Data and GLAM; 14. Publishing Large
Collections of Digitised Printed Material: the National Library of the
Netherlands; Section 3: Publishing and other public-facing practices -
15.Digital Publishing for Smaller Libraries: the Case of Quire at Pitts
Theology Library; 16.The First World War Letters of H.J.C. Peirs: A Case
Study of the Creation and Growth of a Collaborative, Pedagogy-Driven
Digital History Project; 17.Multidisciplinary Research on Family
Historians: Framing Current Challenges in Cultural Heritage; 18.Preserving
Digital Humanities Projects Using Principles of Digital Longevity; 19. The
Static Advantage: Increased Agility and Sustainability of Static-Web-Driven
Development for Digital Humanities Projects; 20. Integrating Human-Centred
Systems Design into Libraries' Digital Ecosystems; 21. Development of an
IIIF-Compatible Digital Collection and Image Usage Analysis: The Case of
the Kyoto University Rare Materials Digital Archive; Section 4. The
profession and the disciplines - 22. Essential Entanglements: Digital
Preservation and the Digital Humanities; 23. The Information Sciences and
the Digital Humanities: Building an Informational Ecosystem; 24.
Interfacing in the Archive: Making Online Collections Work for and with
Digital Humanities Research; 25. Interdisciplinarity as the Framework for
Transition of Digital to Computational Archive: A Case Study of Digital
Curation; 26. Towards a Framework for Digital Scholarship for Higher
Education; 27. Archival and Artificial Intelligence: A Framework to Connect
Them in Practice; Section 5: DH in Organisations - 28.Leveraging and
Creating Library Structures to Support Online Exhibitions; 29. Digital
Preservation Expertise and Labour Throughout the Project Lifecycle; 30.
Digital Humanities at the Bibliothèque nationale de France: Between Age-Old
Objectives and New Uses; 31. A Nation and its Research: the National
Library of Israel in Two Worlds; 32. Archives, Digital Search, and AI
Ethics; 33. Embedding Digital Humanities in the British Library; Index.