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ADHC Talks Podcast: A Conversation with Lauren Cardon (3.4)

作者adhcadmin

Description

Our guest today is Dr. Lauren Cardon. Lauren is Associate Professor and Director of graduate studies in the Department of English here at the University of Alabama. She specializes in 20th-century and contemporary American literature, cultural studies, and critical pedagogy. Lauren has a long history of partnering with the ADHC to give her students the opportunity for multimodal research in the literature classroom.

Today she is joined with one of her undergraduate students, Maylee Hamlet, who was enrolled in EN 361 and worked on the project that we’re going to talk about today. Welcome, Lauren and Maylee.

Season: 3

Episode: 4

Date: 3/2024

Presenter: Lauren Cardon and Maylee Hamlet

Topic: Building a collaborative TimelineJS for Special Topics in American Literature

Tags: American Literature; Digital Projects; TimelineJS

The post ADHC Talks Podcast: A Conversation with Lauren Cardon (3.4) appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Mill Marginalia

作者adhcadmin

Mill Marginalia Online is a digital edition of all marks and annotations in the books of the John Stuart Mill Collection, held at Oxford University’s Somerville College. 

Project Owner(s): Albert Pionke

Tools: WordPress

Methods: Digitization, Preservation, Metadata

Topics: John Stuart Mill

The post Mill Marginalia appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Crimson Fried

作者adhcadmin

Crimson Fried

projects

Description

Crimson Fried is a student-authored forum for delicious recipes and contemporary food-related discourse. Contributors are currently participating in an Advanced Studies in Writing seminar at the University of Alabama, entitled “Discourses of Food: Growing, Cooking, Consuming.”

Project Owner(s): Lauren Cardon
Topic: Food, Recipes, Culinary Journalism
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy
Project Status: Active

The post Crimson Fried appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Comic Relief

作者adhcadmin

The Italian Program in the Department of Modern Languages and Classics at The University of Alabama presents an online seminar series investigating the comic and its uses in moments or situations of trouble. The five talks in our series will variously look at how instances of tribulation, crisis, or upheaval can be examined and made sense of through a comic lens, often leading to a cathartic experience.

Project Owner(s): Jessica Goethals

Topic: Classics, Italian Studies, Comedy

Tool: WordPress

Methodology: Webinars

Project Status: Active


The post Comic Relief appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Networks of Gothic

作者adhcadmin

Networks of Gothic

projects

Description

Networks of Gothic brings together art historians, computer scientists, film and digital media experts to advance the teaching and research of Gothic buildings.

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Art History, Digital Media, Film Studies, Computer Science
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Networking
Project Status: Active

The post Networks of Gothic appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Native American History

作者adhcadmin

Native American History

projects

Description

This course examines the histories of hundreds of indigenous peoples in North America from early human habitation to the present day, with a focus on those residing in what is now the United States and Canada. We will study their experiences; their encounters with one another, Europeans, and Africans; and the different histories that people have told about those experiences and encounters. Class materials, which include art, film, and fiction as well as history and anthropology, stress the diversity of Native lifeways as well as the ways in which the history of American Indians has often been ignored, changed, appropriated, and distorted, as well as reclaimed and re-evaluated over time. Some of the questions we will consider throughout the semester include: How much can we know about Native peoples before they had an alphabetic written history? What can European sources teach us about the Native peoples they encountered? How did the Native peoples of North America live before 1492? Does it make any sense to generalize about “Indians,” given that they include a large number of diverse peoples? How did contact with Europeans and Africans (and their diseases and technologies) change Native societies? How did Natives affect Europeans and Africans? Why did Natives lose ground (literally and figuratively) in the nineteenth century? How have Natives experienced and reacted to the changes of the twentieth century? What does it mean to be a Native in the United States today?

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Native American History, History
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Primary Sources, Timelines
Project Status: Active

The post Native American History appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Music Politics

作者adhcadmin

Music Politics

projects

Description

This website is a cumulative knowledge repository for students in successive sections of Music and Political Movements, and reflects a process of discovery. Students contribute to an ever-growing timeline that highlights particular musical pieces or events that, through initial intention or acquired meaning, have shaped or expressed political sentiment. Students also showcase their primary source projects undertaken at the Hoole Special Collections library. They begin by selecting an item from the collection – often a piece of printed music, a brochure or a manuscript item. Next, they consider how the physical object communicates political feeling or intention, and they pursue secondary source research to inform further the process of inquiry, and to flesh out their understanding of the object, its cultural history, and the political issues of the era in which it was produced. Finally, students create presentations of their research to be featured on this website. Students in subsequent sections of this course have the benefit of learning from and building on the work of earlier sections.

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Music, Politics
Tool: WordPress, TimelineJS
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy
Project Status: Active

The post Music Politics appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Literary Landscapes

作者adhcadmin

Literary Landscapes

projects

Description

The literary movements and periods featured on this site represent the broad spectrum of American literature before the Civil War. For each category, students in two sections of Honors American Literature have provided an introduction to the period, biographical information about several authors important to the period, and some contextual historical information to help viewers better understand the literature of the period––the broader “literary landscape.”

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Literature, History, Geography
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: 
Project Status: Active

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Knitting & History

作者adhcadmin

Knitting & History

projects

Description

 

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Knitting, History
Tool: WordPress, TimelineJS
Methodology: Primary Sources, Digital Exhibits
Project Status: Active

The post Knitting & History appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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HydroMind

作者adhcadmin

Hydrologic research generates large volumes of peer-reviewed literature across a number of evolving sub-topics. It’s becoming increasingly difficult for scientists and practitioners to synthesize this full body of literature. We explore topic modeling as a form of unsupervised learning applied to 42,154 article-abstracts from six high-impact (Impact Factor > 0.9) journals – Water Resources Research (WRR), Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (HESS), Journal of Hydrology (JH), Hydrological Processes (HP), Hydrological Sciences Journal (HSJ), Journal of Hydrometeorology (JHM), to provide a high-level contextual analyses of hydrologic science literature since 1991. We used a hybrid objective-subjective approach to label a number of broad topics in this body of literature, and used these labeled topics to analyze topic trends, inter-topic relationships, and journal diversity. The methods and outcomes of this endeavor are potentially beneficial to scientists and researchers who aim to gain a contextual understanding of the existing state of hydrologic science literature. In the long term, we see topic modeling as a tool to help increase the efficiency of literature reviews, science communication, and science-informed policy and decision making regarding global hydrological systems.

Project Owner(s): Mashrekur Rahman

Topic: Hydrology, Scientific Literature

Tool: WordPress

Methodology: Topic Modeling, Data Mining

Project Status: Live


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Game Archive

作者adhcadmin

Game Archive

projects

Description

From “Royal Game of Ur” (2500+ BCE) to “Monopoly” (1933) , “Pac-Man” (1980), “Magic: the Gathering” (1993), and “The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim” (2011), tabletop games have been a constant form of entertainment, enlightenment, and cultural propaganda in human history. The forms of games, their experiential qualities, and their cultural significance have varied enormously from era to era and place to place. This class will examine particular games and game genres in their historical context using a case study format. We will focus on “board” and “video” games—those of chance and skill as opposed to physical games and sports.

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Games, History
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy
Project Status: Active

The post Game Archive appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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HY 107 Early American History​

作者adhcadmin

HY 107 Early American History

projects

Description

In this course, we explore America’s history before permanent European settlement through the Civil War and Reconstruction. You will study broad themes such as concepts of citizenship and the nation, the role of Native Americans, politics, economic changes, territorial shifts, gender roles, religion, race, slavery, and intellectual and cultural patterns. We will focus on the various and competing definitions given by a wide variety of people to “America,” “freedom,” “citizen,” and “revolution.” What was America, and who counted as Americans? What rights, duties, and privileges came with being Americans? What did it mean to be excluded from this identity? What revolutions changed people’s lives, and how?

Project Owner(s): 
Topic: Early American History, History
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy, Primary Sources
Project Status: Active

The post HY 107 Early American History​ appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Dirt Poor

作者adhcadmin

Dirt Poor

projects

Description

Writers writing about the Great Depression often argue that the stories and remembrances of ordinary people interweave to help us better understand the social, economic, political, and personal struggle of the 1930s in the U.S. And they remind us that these stories—vital threads in our nation’s fabric—are fraying away. Writers tackling The Great Depression mention both the forgotten and the forgetting. What happens when people and the places they inhabited are lost to passing time? What understanding—of our nation and of our own family or community—vanishes when we forget? Are our stories lost forever? Or, can the forgotten be somehow recovered, raised, recalled? And, if recovered, how do they fit into the larger context of our nation’s history? How can we make them endure?

Project Owner(s): Dr. Lauren Cardon
Topic: History, Great Depression, Storytelling
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy
Project Status: Active

The post Dirt Poor appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Vietnam War Oral History Project

作者adhcadmin

Vietnam Oral History Project

projects

Description

This oral history archive has been created by students in Dr. Sarah Steinbock-Pratt’s class on the Vietnam War. The course explores the long history of the Vietnam War, beginning with early Vietnamese history and colonization.

Project Owner(s): Dr. Sarah Steinbock Pratt
Topic: History, Vietnam War
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy, Oral History
Project Status: Active

The post Vietnam War Oral History Project appeared first on Alabama Digital Humanities Center.

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Art of the American South

作者adhcadmin

Art of the American South

projects

Description

This site features a series of online exhibitions about various historical southern art topics. Each project was researched, written, and curated by a student in Dr. Rachel Stephens’ Art History 374 class at The University of Alabama during the spring semester of 2014.

 

Project Owner(s): Dr. Rachel Stephens
Topic: Southern Art, Art History
Tool: WordPress
Methodology: Digital Pedagogy
Project Status: Active

 

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