The Differences between Digital Humanities and Digital History. ROBERTSON, S. In Gold, M. K. & Klein, L. F., editors, Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016, pages 289–307. University of Minnesota Press, 2016. Paper doi abstract bibtex Digital humanities as it is currently constituted has not erased the differences between academic disciplines. Digital humanists share a commitment to collaboration, openness, and experimentation; a set of software tools, such as Voyant, Palladio, or Omeka; and a group of venues such as THATCamp. But disciplinary sources, questions, and approaches shape their projects, as well as their choice and use of digital tools.¹ The \textlessem\textgreaterCompanion to Digital Humanities\textless/em\textgreater, the edited collection that has become a convenient touchstone for the emergence of the field that has succeeded humanities computing, reflects these diverse practices. It contains chapters on work in different disciplines,
@incollection{robertsonDifferencesDigitalHumanities2016,
title = {The {Differences} between {Digital} {Humanities} and {Digital} {History}},
isbn = {978-0-8166-9954-4},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28},
abstract = {Digital humanities as it is currently constituted has not erased the differences between academic disciplines. Digital humanists share a commitment to collaboration, openness, and experimentation; a set of software tools, such as Voyant, Palladio, or Omeka; and a group of venues such as THATCamp. But disciplinary sources, questions, and approaches shape their projects, as well as their choice and use of digital tools.¹ The {\textless}em{\textgreater}Companion to Digital Humanities{\textless}/em{\textgreater}, the edited collection that has become a convenient touchstone for the emergence of the field that has succeeded humanities computing, reflects these diverse practices. It contains chapters on work in different disciplines,},
urldate = {2024-03-05},
booktitle = {Debates in the {Digital} {Humanities} 2016},
publisher = {University of Minnesota Press},
author = {ROBERTSON, STEPHEN},
editor = {Gold, Matthew K. and Klein, Lauren F.},
year = {2016},
doi = {10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28},
pages = {289--307},
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"PQ8mJXuA2xEzBM5M6","bibbaseid":"robertson-thedifferencesbetweendigitalhumanitiesanddigitalhistory-2016","author_short":["ROBERTSON, S."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"incollection","type":"incollection","title":"The Differences between Digital Humanities and Digital History","isbn":"978-0-8166-9954-4","url":"http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28","abstract":"Digital humanities as it is currently constituted has not erased the differences between academic disciplines. Digital humanists share a commitment to collaboration, openness, and experimentation; a set of software tools, such as Voyant, Palladio, or Omeka; and a group of venues such as THATCamp. But disciplinary sources, questions, and approaches shape their projects, as well as their choice and use of digital tools.¹ The \\textlessem\\textgreaterCompanion to Digital Humanities\\textless/em\\textgreater, the edited collection that has become a convenient touchstone for the emergence of the field that has succeeded humanities computing, reflects these diverse practices. It contains chapters on work in different disciplines,","urldate":"2024-03-05","booktitle":"Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["ROBERTSON"],"firstnames":["STEPHEN"],"suffixes":[]}],"editor":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Gold"],"firstnames":["Matthew","K."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Klein"],"firstnames":["Lauren","F."],"suffixes":[]}],"year":"2016","doi":"10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28","pages":"289–307","bibtex":"@incollection{robertsonDifferencesDigitalHumanities2016,\n\ttitle = {The {Differences} between {Digital} {Humanities} and {Digital} {History}},\n\tisbn = {978-0-8166-9954-4},\n\turl = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28},\n\tabstract = {Digital humanities as it is currently constituted has not erased the differences between academic disciplines. Digital humanists share a commitment to collaboration, openness, and experimentation; a set of software tools, such as Voyant, Palladio, or Omeka; and a group of venues such as THATCamp. But disciplinary sources, questions, and approaches shape their projects, as well as their choice and use of digital tools.¹ The {\\textless}em{\\textgreater}Companion to Digital Humanities{\\textless}/em{\\textgreater}, the edited collection that has become a convenient touchstone for the emergence of the field that has succeeded humanities computing, reflects these diverse practices. It contains chapters on work in different disciplines,},\n\turldate = {2024-03-05},\n\tbooktitle = {Debates in the {Digital} {Humanities} 2016},\n\tpublisher = {University of Minnesota Press},\n\tauthor = {ROBERTSON, STEPHEN},\n\teditor = {Gold, Matthew K. and Klein, Lauren F.},\n\tyear = {2016},\n\tdoi = {10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28},\n\tpages = {289--307},\n}\n\n","author_short":["ROBERTSON, S."],"editor_short":["Gold, M. K.","Klein, L. F."],"key":"robertsonDifferencesDigitalHumanities2016","id":"robertsonDifferencesDigitalHumanities2016","bibbaseid":"robertson-thedifferencesbetweendigitalhumanitiesanddigitalhistory-2016","role":"author","urls":{"Paper":"http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.ctt1cn6thb.28"},"metadata":{"authorlinks":{}}},"bibtype":"incollection","biburl":"https://api.zotero.org/groups/2386895/collections/XHYP2IV7/items?format=bibtex&limit=100","dataSources":["L79iy7WyzCDgb996i"],"keywords":[],"search_terms":["differences","between","digital","humanities","digital","history","robertson"],"title":"The Differences between Digital Humanities and Digital History","year":2016}