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THE JOURNAL OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES IS CURRENTLY ON HIATUS.



An experiment in scholarly communication conducted by RRCHNM’s PressForward
Project, JDH was born of the desire to publish the most interesting and
innovative digital humanities gray literature. Funded by the first PressForward
grant (2011-2014) from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, JDH was closely linked to
RRCHNM’s publication, Digital Humanities Now. Metrics for DHNow’s blog posts,
conference presentations and white papers were used to identify content for JDH,
where it was then revised, expanded upon, and eventually published in quarterly
issues.



As an in-house, experimental publication, JDH accomplished its mission to
provide essential insight for launching similar publications at a wide range of
research organizations, the core focus of PressForward’s second (2014-2015) and
third (2015-2018) phases. With this role behind it, JDH is taking a break while
we at RRCHNM plan a sustainable second act. Our hope is that JDH will re-emerge
as a journal that continues to highlight work in digital humanities. Until then,
we are at work on an analysis of JDH’s first two years, and will share that
publicly on its completion. Previous issues will remain archived and available
for download.




JOURNAL OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES, VOL. 3, NO. 2

Available for download


INTRODUCTION


DIGITAL CONTEXTS

THE EDITORS

The digital contexts of our scholarly practice impact not only the kind of work
that we may do as humanists, but also how we represent changes in theory and
methods over time. Whether we are preserving, analyzing, or representing
cultural heritage collections, interpreting digital media, or communicating
through open repositories or social media, our activities […]


FEATURES

On the Origin of "Hack" and "Yack"
Bethany Nowviskie

Using Computer Vision to Increase the Research Potential of Photo Archives
John Resig



"...archival theory and practice need to be an integral element of such a
critical framework, along with evolving historiographical and professional
practices. The digital medium has challenged historians to expand their
knowledge about archives, and understand their function in generating
scholarship and knowledge."

Joshua Sternfeld, Katharina Hering, Kate Theimer, and Michael Kramer


FOCUS

Digital Historiography and the Archives
Katharina Hering, Michael J. Kramer, Joshua Sternfeld and Kate Theimer

Historical Understanding in the Quantum Age
Joshua Sternfeld

A Distinction Worth Exploring: “Archives” and “Digital Historical
Representations”
Kate Theimer

Going Meta on Metadata
Michael J. Kramer

Provenance Meets Source Criticism
Katharina Hering


REVIEW

Review of The Johns Hopkins Guide to Digital Media (2014)
Alex Christie

"In addition to plotting related instances of digital media scholarship and
creation, the Guide unpacks digital media, itself as a territory in which
coordinates are enmeshed in humanities and social sciences research."

Alex Christie

ISSN 2165-6673

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.