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  1. Home
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  3. Writing History in the Digital Age

Writing History in the Digital Age

Jack Dougherty and Kristen Nawrotzki, editors
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  • Overview

  • Contents

Writing History in the Digital Age began as a "what-if" experiment by posing a question: How have Internet technologies influenced how historians think, teach, author, and publish? To illustrate their answer, the contributors agreed to share the stages of their book-in-progress as it was constructed on the public web.

To facilitate this innovative volume, editors Jack Dougherty and Kristen Nawrotzki designed a born-digital, open-access, and open peer review process to capture commentary from appointed experts and general readers. A customized WordPress plug-in allowed audiences to add page- and paragraph-level comments to the manuscript, transforming it into a socially networked text. The initial six-week proposal phase generated over 250 comments, and the subsequent eight-week public review of full drafts drew 942 additional comments from readers across different parts of the globe.

The finished product now presents 20 essays from a wide array of notable scholars, each examining (and then breaking apart and reexamining) if and how digital and emergent technologies have changed the historical profession.

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the Web Version
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. Re-Visioning Historical Writing
    • Is (Digital) History More than an Argument about the Past?
    • Pasts in a Digital Age
  • Part 2. The Wisdom of Crowds(ourcing)
    • “I Nevertheless Am a Historian”: Digital Historical Practice and Malpractice around Black Confederate Soldiers
    • The Historian's Craft, Popular Memory, and Wikipedia
    • The Wikiblitz: A Wikipedia Editing Assignment in a First-Year Undergraduate Class
    • Wikipedia and Women's History: A Classroom Experience
  • Part 3. Practice What You Teach (and teach what you practice)
    • Toward Teaching the Introductory History Course, Digitally
    • Learning How to Write Analog and Digital History
    • Teaching Wikipedia without Apologies
  • Part 4. Writing with the Needles from Your Data Haystack
    • Historical Research and the Problem of Categories: Reflections on 10,000 Digital Note Cards
    • Creating Meaning in a Sea of Information: The Women and Social Movements Web Sites
    • The Hermeneutics of Data and Historical Writing
  • Part 5. See What I Mean? Visual, Spatial, and Game-Based History
    • Visualizations and Historical Arguments
    • Putting Harlem on the Map
    • Pox and the City: Challenges in Writing a Digital History Game
  • Part 6. Public History on the Web: If You Build It, Will They Come?
    • Writing Chicana/o History with the Seattle Civil Rights and Labor History Project
    • Citizen Scholars: Facebook and the Co-creation of Knowledge
    • The HeritageCrowd Project: A Case Study in Crowdsourcing Public History
  • Part 7. Collaborative Writing: Yours, Mine, and Ours
    • The Accountability Partnership: Writing and Surviving in the Digital Age
    • Only Typing? Informal Writing, Blogging, and the Academy
  • Conclusions: What We Learned from Writing History in the Digital Age
  • Contributors
Citable Link
Published: 2013
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license
ISBN(s)
  • 978-0-472-07206-4 (hardcover)
  • 978-0-472-90024-4 (open access)
  • 978-0-472-05206-6 (paper)
Series
  • Digital Humanities
Subject
  • Cultural Studies
  • Media Studies:New Media
  • History:Historical Methods and Theory
  • Digital Projects

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