Introduction | Agenda | Previous Work |
Current Best Examples | Proposal
Writing CURRENT
BEST EXAMPLES [last updated
9/21/00]
Below are
included examples of exemplary digital projects
submitted by participants, classified under broad
headings and tied in, where possible, to themes
of the conference. This area is designed to show
the best possible examples of what is currently
possible. See field area "Preliminary
Readings" for more specific resources for
particular fields.
Topical
Session A: Possibilities
of Digital Media
Topical
Session B: New Models
of Electronic Publication/Dissemination
Topical
Session C: Visualization/Interactivity
Teaching
Tools
Research
Tools
Resources
TOPICAL
SESSION A: Possibilities of Digital Media
The
Rossetti Archive - Edited by
Jerome J. McGann
This
work-in-progress not only provides a
sophisticated approach to web site construction,
but it also asks searching bibliographical
questions about what we mean by
"edition" and even "text." It
is as theoretically interesting as it is
practically useful. For an already large site, it
seems to be evolving in a very lucid way. - Jeff
Groves History
Monuments of the Future: Designs
by El Lissitzky
This site exemplifies the
type of interdisclipinary (art history;
information science; cataloging; photography;
digital imaging; project management) teamwork
that is necessary to build high-quality digital
library resources. It also shows how the Web can
be used by institutions to disseminate
collections that would otherwise only be seen by
a handful of researchers who had the ability to
consult them in situ. (see accordion foldout
under Printing Trades and Press
Exhibitions -
Murtha Baca Visual & Media Studies
Investigating Bellini's
Feast of the Gods (Also see resting
technical multimedia: http://webexhibits.org/feast/theVersions/comparison.html
This site explores what
versions of this painting might have looked like
after Titian's famous re-painting. It is provided
as a public service of Brandeis University and
the Institute for Dynamic Educational Advancement
(IDEA) by WebExhibits. It demonstrates how any
student can develop insight into art from
scientific data - individually, interactively, in
great detail and depth - using interactive media.
-Kirk Alexander Visual & Media Studies
Walks in Rome (Public Demo) - John Pinto and Kirk Alexander,
Princeton University
This project addresses the
issue of CONTEXT in teaching in the humanities.
Specifically it examines the architectural
development in Rome over the course of many
centuries. Various aspects of context
(historical, spatial, literary, supplemental) are
explored by means of a complex database and an
intricate digitized map from the 18th century
while thematic context is explored in the
animated Walks themselves. Here three separate
online "lectures" are built up from
over 100 animated segments that form a part of
the sequence in the lectures but which can be
used as standalone components in the classroom.
Two of these animated segments are available on
the demonstration site. -Kirk Alexander Visual & Media
Studies
back to
top
TOPICAL
SESSION B. New Models of Electronic
Publication/Dissemination
A
Historian of Computing Abandons Traditional
Publishing for CD-ROM's
--Chronicle
of Higher Education article, 9/13/00, pertinent
to this discussion Frank Mohler Performing
Arts
The
History Cooperative
The History
Cooperative is an innovative effort in electronic
journal publishing. It is the only project
devoted to a single discipline. Four founding
partners launched it in March 2000: the American
Historical Association, the Organization of
American Historians, the University of Illinois
Press, and the National Academy Press. It now
publishes electronic versions of the two leading
history journals in the United States: the
American Historical Review and the Journal of
American History. The History Teacher, the
nation's leading journal devoted to historical
pedagogy, just joined the Cooperative and others
will soon do so. The intent of the founders is to
make the Cooperative a major site for the
dissemination and review of historical
scholarship and a leading innovator in electronic
publication. - Mike Grossberg History
Project
MUSE
"In
2000, Project MUSE enters its second phase of
development with the addition of over 60 quality
journal titles from other scholarly publishers,
bringing the database's total offerings to well
over 100 titles. As the academic community's
primary electronic resource, Project MUSE covers
the fields of literature and criticism, history,
the visual and performing arts, cultural studies,
education, political science, gender studies, and
many others. Project MUSE is setting the standard
for scholarly electronic journals in the
humanities and social sciences. At this time,
Project MUSE subscriptions are available only to
institutions."- Charles
Harris Language
& Literature
Eastgate
Hypertext Superstore
I hesitated
between this and trying to find Stephen King's
on-line publishing ventures, which are the most
visible sign that electronic media will change
the relationship between author, publisher, and
consumer forever. Eastgate combines aspects of a
portal, a publisher, and a bookseller, yet
belongs fully to none of these categories. It
"publishes" hypertext, which some have
theorized changes the nature of textuality
itself. My interest in all this relates primarily
to the fate of my own scholarly writing: if I can
publish myself instantly on-line, why should I
wait an extra two years to appear in a print
journal? - Tom Beebee Language
& Literature
http://www.slashdot.org/
Originally
a discussion forum for the open source community,
slashdot has evolved into a 24/7 focal point for
a variety of issues having direct bearing on
scholarly electronic publishing -- notably data
standards and intellectual property -- not to
mention the odd bit of industry rumor mongering
and humor.
The
real interest of the site, however, may be in its
innovative "slash" source code which
enables threaded discussions of remarkable
complexity: posts are quasi-refereed, with
contributions moderated up or down in the
hierarchy by peer observers; readers can choose
to browse discussions at multiple thresholds,
viewing only the most highly rated comments or
every electronic scrap and jot; contributors log
in and accumulate "karma," so that
those who participate regularly and well have
greater visibility and influence in the
community. Many potential applications to
scholary communication in the humanities here
(and the source code is free). Matt
Kirschenbaum Language
& Literature
STOA
A scholarly
collaborative, publishing works in classics on a
peer-reviewed website:
"We
intend:
to foster a new style of
refereed scholarly publications in the
humanities not only of interest to
specialists but also -- and just as
importantly --accessible by design and
choice of medium to wide public
audiences.
to develop and refine new
models for scholarly collaboration via
the Internet.
to help insure the long-term
interoperability and archival
availability of electronic materials.
to support resolutions to
copyright and other issues as they arise
in the course of scholarly electronic
publication.
-
Electronic
Literature Directory,
This is the first major project of the Electronic
Literature Organization, a non-profit group
chartered to "promote and facilitate the
writing, publishing, and reading of electronic
literature." What ELO, or anyone, means by
"electronic literature" is of course a
matter of great uncertainty, but the Directory
takes a giant step toward defining the concept
empirically. More than 300 authors are currently
indexed and works included range from hypertext
fiction and poetry to kinetic writing and
"cybertext." This is probably the best
place to start for anyone seriously interested in
literary applications of information technology.
-Stuart Moulthrop Language
& Literature
back to
top
TOPICAL
SESSION C: Visualization/Interactivity
dohistory:
Martha
Ballard's Diary On-line
Interactivity
is difficult to achieve in digital history.
Dohistory manages to introduce interactivity into
doing history by several innovative means. Among
other interesting applications, the site allows
students to grapple with 18th century manuscript
script and use primary documents to explore two
interesting incidents. - Paula Petrik History
Provides
a remarkable primary source document along with
the contextualizing tools and information needed
to make it comprehensible to the average user.
Bernard Reilly Visual &
Media Studies
American
Memory: Panoramic Maps
"The
panoramic map was a popular cartographic form
used to depict U.S. and Canadian cities and towns
during the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Known also as bird's-eye views,
perspective maps, and aero views, panoramic maps
are nonphotographic representations of cities
portrayed as if viewed from above at an oblique
angle. Although not generally drawn to scale,
they show street patterns, individual buildings,
and major landscape features in
perspective." These maps have always been interesting
teaching and research tools. Unfortunately, they
are as large as small area rugs or large bathmats
and have not been practical for classroom use.
Using software developed by Lizard Technology--a
technology that allows high resolution
"zooming," the Library of Congress has
made it possible for both researchers and
students to explore these maps interactively. -
Paula Petrik History
Built in America:
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic
American Engineering Record, 1933-Present
For many
historians, the built environment has become
increasingly interesting as a focus research and
teaching. Although the collection is not
finished, "[s]s of March 1998, America's
built environment has been recorded through
surveys containing more than 363,000 measured
drawings, large-format photographs, and written
histories for more than 35,000 historic
structures and sites dating from the seventeenth
to the twentieth century. This first release adds
digital images to the searchable on-line catalog
records, including images of the pages of written
histories for all HAER surveys and about 25% of
HABS surveys, 17% of the HAER survey photographs
and a small sampling of the HABS and HAER
measured drawings." Researchers can explore
(and compare) structures ranging from slave
dwellings to industrial buildings.- Paula Petrik History
-[The American Memory
project in general] is the repository of a
terrific amount of information for historians of
this country's built environment, including a
wide range of zoomable maps and views (using
MRSID), photographs and prints, and the huge body
of documentation in the Historic American
Buildings Survey and the Historic American
Engineering Record, the former of which began
compiling photos, drawings, and data in the 1930s
-
Jeffrey Cohen Visual &
Media Studies
The Electronic Cultural
Atlas Initiative
Founded by prominent
Buddhist scholar, Lew Lancaster, this ambitious
project is a scholarly dataset clearinghouse that
is attempting to create uniform metadata
standards [using the Dublin Core] and make
accessible through the ECAI dataset browser
information and access to over 150 databases. The
ECAI is developing an interface that will
incorporate interactivity in utilizing the data,
and also will utilize GIS. According to the
primary mission statement:
"The Electronic
Cultural Atlas Initiative(ECAI) constitutes a new
dimension in academic research and international
collaboration.ECAI Atlas Teams of area
specialists, in conjunction with ECAI Technical
Teams, are producing an interactive electronic
atlas of theworld from which selected data from
regions, eras, and disciplines can be
instantaneously accessed.
ECAI encourages
participation of individuals and organizations in
a wide range of academic disciplines as well as
technical specialists.With the support of
academic institutions, private institutions, and
corporate sponsors, ECAI is developing an online
system which provides access to a wide range of
global information, enabling integrated scholarly
analysis of primary resources. " - Marilyn Levine History
The TimeMap Project
Created by Ian Johnson at
the University of Sydney, this project is about
history in its full context of time and space.
Currently, the TimeMap has projects on the
history of Sydney and the China Time Map. Johnson
has also contributed to developing the Metadata
clearinghouse for the ECAI and if you browse the
datasets you can see there over 100 registered
datasets available for access and for mapping. - Marilyn Levine History
The Cambodian Genocide
Project
A broad project, headed by
Susan Cook at Yale University, that gathers
resources on Cambodia, and in particular has an
interactive database, developed by Helen Jarvis
at the University of New South Wales. There are
four different types of information in the
database section: bibliographic, biographic,
photographic and geographic. These thousands of
records have actually resulted in the
reunification of Cambodian refugees. - Marilyn Levine History
back
to top)
TEACHING TOOL
The Development of
Scenic Spectacle by Frank Mohler
historical
reconstruction with moving images - Mark Pizzato Performing
Arts
The Pageant Simulator
- represents the York cycle
plays. Has animation showing different pageant
length options. I use this in Theatre History
every year. Quite ingenious, and uses technology
to illustrate scholarly debate. Susan Kattwinkel Performing
Arts
Forms of World
Literature (CMLIT010) coursepage
Believe me, it is
laziness rather than vanity that makes me include
the coursepage(s) I developed (along with Amy
Armbruster of PSU EducationalTechnology Services)
for my course in world literature. I'm sure
thatbetter and fancier (not synonyms) sites
exist. However, clicking through the site does
take one through a wide array of web-based
teaching technologies: synchronous chat;
asynchronous bulletin board; interactive quizzes;
on-line reserve readings; and so on. With the
right plug-in, you can listen to a poem in
Chinese or French. - Tom Beebee Language
& Literature
Uncle Tom's Cabin and
American Culture. by Stephen Railton,
University of Virginia
This site brings
together materials from a number of
different archives, materials that are extremely
useful for teaching/studying Stowe's novel. The
site serves as model (one of many, of course) for
how scholars can utilize the web to pull together
images from diverse sources and package them in a
sensible but involving way. - Jeff Groves History
American
Memory - Library of Congress.
-Capacious and
serendipitous. This site has grown to such an
extent that using it is really beginning to feel
like walking down the aisles of a library--you're
never sure what interesting thing you might come
across next. This is an excellent site for anyone
who teaches in the American Studies realm.- Jeff
Groves History
-Aimed in part at helping
public school teachers find and use digitized
versions of primary source material, this site
now maintains more than 80 historical online
collections from the Library of Congress. Its
greatest strength lies in its providing material
that at one time could be accessed only if one
traveled to the Library of Congress. I've been
especially impressed with with its elegant design
and panoply of photographs, manuscripts, rare
books, maps, and all sorts of wonderful images. -
Gail Hawisher Language
& Literature
-As an established
collection, this site allows both researchers and
students to cull a wide variety of materials
which can be reused in various ways. This site is
exemplary for several reasons: it incorporates
and communicates emerging best practices; it
combines various media; it offers interoperable
search and display techniques in a flexible
framework; and it attempts to combine contextual
information with database search functions. - Virginia
Kerr Visual &
Media Studies
SCRAN (Scottish
Resources Access Network)
A
consortium project that involves a variety of
Scots institutions, and is building a database of
wide-ranging cultural materials. It is still
under construction and some of it is password
protected, but click "projects" and
then search "Glasgow" Suggested
Categories or Heading Teaching Tool. - Bernard
Reilly Visual &
Media Studies
The
John C. and Susan L. Huntington Archive of
Buddhist and Related Art : A
Photographic Research and Teaching Archive
This
project has spectacular photos of sacred sites
with varying views, and key links on teaching
about the art. It is based on the John C. and
Susan L. Huntington Photographic Archive of
Buddhist and Related Art which contains nearly
300,000 original color slides and black and white
and color photographs of art and architecture
throughout Asia. Countries covered in the
collection include India, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, China, Japan,
Thailand, Indonesia, and Myanmar (Burma). -
Marilyn Levine History
Cities/Buildings
Archive
A
remarkably well-documented and far-ranging,
searchable image resource for teaching
architectural history. Effective use of database
back-end. Broad rather than deep. Its founder has
been willing to share images with a handful of
similarly conceived projects, including one I've
been working on with the SAH, at http://www.sah.org/imagex.html, but this is
much more technologically polished and featured.
- Jeffrey Cohen Visual &
Media Studies
Chicago
Imagebase
A
wonderfully rich resource for presenting
materials on the physical aspect of this city and
its architecture, many of them otherwise usually
unavailable outside research libraries in
Chicago. Deep more than broad, but on a subject
that is considered key to many narratives about
the emergence of modern architecture. I've been
working on a similar project on the Philadelphia
area (http://www.brynmawr.edu/iconog/), but again
much less technologically polished and featured.
- Jeffrey Cohen Visual &
Media Studies
Investigating the Renaissance
Though 2 years old, this
site shows how digital imaging technology and the
Web, can be used to publish
information related to art history. - Murtha Baca
Visual
& Media Studies
back to
top
RESEARCH TOOL
Getty Vocabularies (Art & Architecture Thesaurus, Union List of Artist Names, Thesaurus of Geographic Names)
Available free of charge on
the Web, these three databases get an average of
150,000 searches per month. Can be used as lookup
tools, cataloging aids, etc. - Murtha Baca Visual & Media
Studies
The Perseus Project
A very rich site for the
study of and teaching about the ancient world.
Includes the Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical
Sites and an extensive encyclopedia of terms
relating to ancient history, archaeology,
architecture, etc. Interface leaves quite a bit
to be desired. - Murtha Baca Visual & Media
Studies
Manfred
Jahn's Narratology Web site:
To the
teacher of narrative theory, this site offers a
very usefulcollection of documents, definitions
of key concepts, bibliographies, and survey of
the field of narratology. Site has recently been
expanded to include poetry and drama. -
Marie-Laure Ryan Language
& Literature
The
Robert B. Honeyman Jr. Collection Digital Archive
An exemplary
project in its exploration and resolution of
several issues involved in providing access to
cultural heritage materials (detailed item-level
descriptions as well as digital facsimiles of
collection items) via a networked environment.
The project developed detailed encoded online
finding aids using the Encoded Archival
Description (EAD) standard with a full
description of each item hyperlinked to
high-quality archival digital images. Katherine
Poole Visual
& Media Studies
Penn
State Libraries On-Line Resources Tool
Despite its
unsophisticated look, no other website gives me
more bang for the click than this one. This is
how I find stuff, and often how I read it or
order a copy. Just as card catalogs and indexes
revolutionized the method of looking for books
and articles, online indexes have revolutionized
the method of looking for -- and through -- card
catalogs and indexes! - Tom Beebee Language
& Literature
The
International Dunhuang Project
This
is a high quality Web project, developed by Susan
Whitfield at the British Library. This page gives
access to information on over 28,000 manuscripts
and printed documents from Central Asia in the
British Library collection. It also includes high
quality colour images of manuscript fragments,
with more images being added every week. -
Marilyn Levine History
The
Center for the History of Music Theory and
Literature
This
site is the home for several projects: Thesaurus
Musicarum Latinarum (TML), Doctoral Dissertations
in Musicology--Online (DDM-Online), Saggi
musicali italiani (SMI), and Musical Borrowing.
The TML, which provides fully searchable texts
for music theory written in Latin from the time
of Augustine through the sixteenth century, is
one of the largest full-text databases (5,000,000
words of text and more than 4,000 graphics) of
literature; it averages more than 1300 visits and
700 searches per month. DDM-Online, which isalso
fully searchable, contains more than 10,000
records and averages more than 5,000 searches per
month. SMI and Musical Borrowing are smaller and
newer projects. Both the CHMTL and the TML have
been Scout, Webivore, and Schoolzone selections;
the TML has also been the recipient of two
substantial NEW grants (in 1992 and 1994). Thomas
J. Mathiesen Performing
Arts
back to
top
GENERAL/PROFESSIONAL
RESOURCES
CAA.Reviews:
Books Received - New College Art Association's
Database (coming this winter)
-
College Art Association's CAA's "Books
Received" list-that is, a list of all books
and exhibition catalogues that are sent to the
College Art Association for review in one or all
of our three journals (Art Bulletin, Art Journal,
and CAA.Reviews) is published in Art Bulletin and
put up on our CAA.Reviews site
(www.caareviews.org/books/bookindex.html).
We
are currently turning this book list into an
interactive, searchable database. Initially
created to permit a cost-effective and timely way
for CAA staff and reviewers to keep on top of the
business of book reviewing, the new database will
allow scholars to design their own subject
headings by using indexes and keywords and
combining search terms. The working list for
categories for the database are
"chronological,"
"geographical," "medium,"
"publications type," and "subject
type." Within these broad headings are more
specific delineations, such as
"prehistoric," "art
education," "artist's book,"
"Africa," and "architecture/urban
planning/historic preservation. The category
selections are extremely difficult to determine.
Initially created by a reference librarian who is
also an art historian and refined by the
CAA.Reviews editorial board and its field of
editors, the list has been sent to CAA members
(via an article in the newsletter) to ask for
their input. The books database is scheduled to
be launched this winter. - Elaine Koss Visual &
Media Studies
Writing
Across the Curriculum Clearing House
Several
years in the making, the WAC Clearing House
offers a wealth of resources to support those
universities interested in establishing or
maintaining WAC programs. Among the resources are
an excellent overview of WAC (its history and
current key issues); links to dissertations and
master's theses, articles, studies,
bibliographies, journals, listservs; and
academic. writing, the journal housed at the
site. Instead of having to go to a huge number of
sites to collect information relating to WAC, I
now need only access this one site to find what I
need. - Gail Hawisher
Language
& Literature
Making
of America: University
of Michigan and Cornell
University
This
collection is impressive for several reasons: its
bulk; its effort to establish best practices for
handling history primary source materials using
an imaged page option; and the development of
middleware which allows the welding of imaged
pages with background ocr, now used in other
sites such as the JSTOR journals repository. -
Virginia Kerr Visual &
Media Studies
The Fine Arts Museums of San
Francisco (FAMSF)
Web site provides access to
over ImageBase, a searchable image and text
database of 75,000 objects from the collections
of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco (the de
Young Museum and the Legion of Honor)."The
ImageBase is an expression of the Museum's
mission to provide
meaningful public access to the collections and
behave more like a resource and less like a
repository."
The
Voice of the Shuttle
Along with
the Carnegie Mellon English Server, Postmodern
Culture, and a few similar sites, The Voice of
the Shuttle helped define the humanistic interest
in the World Wide Web. VOS has consistently
provided an outstandingly good set of links and
thus a first-rate humanist's portal to the Web,
but it also offers the thinking of Alan Liu and
others involved in one of the more important
emerging digital humanities programs in the U.S. Stuart
Moulthrop Language
& Literature
Electronic
Book Review
-Visually
stunning site, including both opinionated reviews
of recent books and groups of essays
investigating particular issues in electronic
culture and new media. - Marie-Laure Ryan Language
& Literature
-Edited by
Joe Tabbi, ebr is the only on-line journal
devoted to literary scholarship. Its special
focus is electronic literature and culture, and
its reviews are extensive. Now in its tenth
issue. - Charles
Harris Language
& Literature
Electonic
Poetry Center
Central
gateway to resources in electronic poetry and
poetics at SUNY-Buffalo, where the site is
hosted, and elsewhere on the Net. Focuses on
contemporary experimental and formally innovative
poetry. A diverse site, with audio as well as
visual resources, helpful lists and directories,
and useful links. - Charles
Harris Language
& Literature
Port
A
portal with modest aims, but with a functional
infrastructure for delivering Web resources
devoted to a well-defined subject, and the
commitment to maintaining the resource over time.
- Bernard Reilly Visual &
Media Studies
Voice of
the Shuttle:
A most useful
collection of links to documents concerning print
and digital literary texts.- Marie-Laure Ryan Language
& Literature
Grove Dictionary of Art
An extremely useful
one-stop reference tool for the study
and teaching of art history; available by
subscription. Link to Bridgeman Art Library Web
site provides a fairly wide variety of related
images. (current interface is quite weak) -
Murtha Baca Visual & Media Studies
WWW
Virtual Library: Theatre
a listing of
theatre websites (especially useful for its list
of "image collections") - Mark Pizzato Performing
Arts
Internet
Movie Database
Great resource for
info on film & TV titles, artists involved,
plot summaries, etc. - Mark Pizzato Performing
Arts
Hamlet on the Holodeck: Companion Web site to
Janet Murray's book
Gives access to
many of the digital works discussed in the
book-works that cannot be quoted in print form. A
very successful example of how print and digital
technology can work together.- Marie-Laure Ryan Language
& Literature
Google
I hesitated in listing my
favorite search engine, but I don't know what I'd
do without it. Without a good search engine (and
we could argue that none to date are really
adequate), I'm reduced to relying on
word-of-mouth recommendations or sheer luck. - Gail
Hawisher Language
& Literature
|