DLCL 122 - 2017
DLCL 122
Winter 2017
MW: 03:00p-04:20p
Room: 260-241
Course Site: http://blalbrit.github.io/courses/dlcl122_2017
Additional Files: https://stanford.box.com/s/5kkgalqmlfrdmdblbxyscnorrexfjxbm
Course Blog
Mirador Instance
The Digital Middle Ages
Benjamin Albritton
Email: blalbrit@stanford.edu
Office: Lathrop Library, 3rd Floor
Office Hours: By appointment
Course Description
Medieval Studies is entering a phase of digital abundance. In the last six years, more medieval material has been put online than has ever been available for study at any point in the past. How can we engage with the growing mass of digitized material available to us? How does this sudden access impact the work we do, the types of questions we ask, the connections we make, and the audiences we write for?
In this course, we will examine and evaluate digital medieval resources and software that has been created for interacting with those resources. Students will have the opportunity to design and create an innovative project based on medieval primary sources held at Stanford, applying current digital methods in the analysis of those resources.
Course Goals
By the end of the course, committed students will be able to:
- Evaluate current tools for approaching historical objects and texts
- Develop productive, socially aware and culturally relevant questions about a text or object
- Consider multiple and divergent solutions to the problem of making historical sources accessible using different digital media and platforms
- Describe different forms of medieval cultural production
- Produce a project that integrates social and historical methods with contemporary scholarly tools
Assessment
Your final grade will reflect the sum of your work over the quarter, with the following weighting:
- Readings and Discussions 20%
- Practical Exercises 20%
- Blogging 20%
- Final Project 40%
- Presentation (10%)
- Contribution to Exhibit (15%)
- Paper (15%)
Assignments
Readings and Discussions
Reading assignments are posted in the course schedule below, though there will be some changes or additions depending on the overall direction of the final projects (all updates will be reflected on the course website). You will be required to submit at least two discussion questions based on the readings for each day that the class meets. These questions should be posted to the course blog by midnight of the day before class.
Practical Exercises
There will be five exercises over to complete during the course. The exercises are all designed to allow you the opportunity to work with software and materials to produce content that can be re-used as part of your final project. Upon completion of the exercise, you will be asked to write a short blog post reflecting upon aspects of the exercise. These reflective posts should be added to the blog no later than the start of the next class AFTER the exercise has been completed.
Exercise 1
- Find two online medieval manuscript repositories.
- Critique them – prepared to discuss in class.
- Points to consider:
- Content
- “metadata”
- additional information
- ability to interact with the resources
- Your critique and class discussion will fuel a blog post.
Exercise 2
- Formulate a question about one or more primary resources available digitally at Stanford (preferably from the data set to be used in the final project).
- Using the Mirador tool, annotate primary resources to provide evidence for answering you question.
- Be prepared to discuss your question and evidence in class.
- Write up the question and supporting evidence in a blog post following class discussion.
Exercise 3
- Choose an object that you wish to transcribe from the data set to be used in the final project.
- Using the T-PEN tool, transcribe that object (noting anything unusual in the “notes” field as you work).
- Be prepared to discuss the process and outcomes in class.
- Present your transcription in a blog post following class discussion.
Exercise 4
- Using the text you transcribed in Exercise 3, compare it to an edition or another witness of the same text
- Mark these up for presentation in the Versioning Machine
- Think about the differences in the versions, and why they might be of interest – be prepared to discuss in class.
- Present your versions in a blog post following class discussion.
Exercise 5
- Choose a small textual corpus related to the materials you are working on for the final project.
- Using the Voyant tools, begin to analyze this corpus of texts.
- Reflect on limitations and possibilities of this tool and this approach to analysis as they relate to the final project.
- Present your analysis in a blog post following class discussion.
Blogging
This class is a community, and together we are producing a public outcome (the final project). As a community, sharing our thoughts, reflections, and intermediate outputs is critical – as is learning to work publicly. While our blog will not likely be widely read, it is a key component of tracking and building our course (and an opportunity to practice writing for different audiences). You will be required to provide regular updates to the blog as follows:
- Discussion questions for every reading assignment
- Reflective posts presenting the results of the Practical Exercises
Additionally, you can optionally use the blog to raise questions, provide additional materials to share with the other participants, or present ideas for course critique.
Final Project
The outcome of this class will be a final project dedicated to sharing your research in a useful way with the world. There are three components to this:
- A digital exhibit hosted by the Stanford University Libraries, produced by the participants in the class (myself included). Each participant will be responsible for one section of the exhibit.
- A paper presenting your exhibit “section” in a slightly more formal manner.
- A class presentation of your material intended as a 15-20 minute summary of your work as if it were a conference paper.
The parameters for the project are as follows:
- Materials: we will agree, as a class, what our corpus of materials will be, but they should be drawn from the selection of materials where Stanford a) owns the physical objects and b) has digitized them.
- Methodologies: depending on the topic you choose to focus on within these materials, you may choose to do a deep analysis using a single analytic method, or you may choose to do a broad presentation of multiple approaches to your materials. We will discuss this as you develop your project goals.
- External Materials: it is possible to bring external resources into the exhibit, but I encourage talking about this early and often.
Attribution and Preservation:
- This is your scholarly work, and will contribute to our knowledge about the materials you work on. Every aspect of your work in this class will be associated with your name, as an author – from blog posts, to data, to papers.
- We will deposit all course outcomes into the Stanford Digital Repository, with each of you named as authors on your own work. This means that the material will be preserved for the long term, and that you will be able to refer to this material in the future by linking to its Persistent URL (PURL).
Significant dates:
- January 25: one paragraph describing the object(s) you will use for your portion of the final project and why it/they are of interest to you, for sharing and discussion with the class.
- February 6: lead an in-class discussion of the materials for your final project (including an outline of what you would like to do with them and how you think your project will take shape).
- March 1: Final outline of both paper and exhibit due for discussion in class.
- March 13: Class presentation of final project.
- March 15: Exhibit Launch.
- March22: Paper due.
NB: You are welcome to submit a draft of your paper to me for review at any time after March 1. We will be building the exhibit together as a class on an ongoing basis.
Course Schedule
Week 1: Discovering
- Overview
- Syllabus, introductions, discussion of assignments.
- Stanford’s digitized medieval manuscripts.
- Discovering and evaluating digital medieval resources.
- 9 January
- Complete Markdown tutorial
- Create github account
- Complete Git tutorial
- Exercise 1 (see description above)
- 11 January
- Reading
- Raymond Clemens and Timothy Graham, “Manuscript Description,” in Introduction to Manuscript Studies, pp. 129-134.
- “Digitization” in Tooling Up for Digital Humanities.
- Elaine Treharne, Suzanne Paul, “Shelf marks and catalogs,” 2015. (video)
- Reading
Week 2: Annotating
- 16 January: Holiday - NO CLASS
- 18 January
- Reading
- John Unsworth, “Scholarly Primitives: what methods do humanities researchers have in common, and how might our tools reflect this?”, May 2000.
- Daniel Paul O’Donnell, “Disciplinary Impact and Technological Obsolescence,” in Digital Medieval Studies, 2008.
- Explore (http://projectmirador.org/) and watch screencast.
- Blog post for Exercise 1 due
- Start Exercise 2 (see description above)
- Reading
Week 3: More Annotating
- 23 January
- Reading
- Clemens and Graham, “Correction, Glossing, and Annotations,” in Introduction to Manuscript Studies, pp. 35-48.
- Martin Foys, Shannon Bradshaw, “Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps,” 2011.
- Roberto A. Busa, “Foreword: Perspectives on the Digital Humanities,” in A Companion to Digital Humanities, 2004.
- Reading
- 25 January
- Reading
- Trevor Owens, “Defining Data for Humanists: Text, Artifact, Information or Evidence?,” in Journal of Digital Humanities, Vol. 1, No. 1, Winter 2011.
- Julia Flanders and Fotis Jannidis, “Data Modeling,” in A New Companion to Digital Humanities, Schreibman, Siemens and Unsworth, eds., 2016.
- Exercise 2 Due
- Reading
Week 4: Transcribing
- 30 January
- Reading
- Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, “How to Transcribe Middle English,” in Opening Up Middle English Manuscripts: Literary & Visual Approaches, pp. 2-5
- “A Walkthrough of T-PEN” (video)
- Allen H. Renear, “Text Encoding,” in A Companion to Digital Humanities, 2004.
- Start Exercise 3 (see description above)
- Reading
- 1 February
- Reading
- Kevin S. Hawkins, “Introduction to XML for Text”
- “A very gentle introduction to the TEI markup language”
- Vanessa Wilkie, “Medieval Manuscripts in the Digital Age”, 2015.
- Albritton, Benjamin, “Fellow Travelers: The Canterbury Tales and IIIF,” 2015.
- Reading
Week 5: Comparing
- 6 February - Meet at Special Collections Reading Room - Green Library
- Reading
- no assigned reading
- Guide sheet for digitization lab visit
- Exercise 3 due
- Reading
- 8 February
- Reading
- Peter A. Stokes, “Using DigiPal: A Quick Introduction to the Framework,” 2015.
- Stuart Snydman, Robert Sanderson, Tom Cramer, “The International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF): A community & technology approach for web-based images,” 2015.
- Sanderson, Albritton, et al. “SharedCanvas: A Collaborative Model for Medieval Manuscript Layout Dissemination”
- Start Exercise 4 (see description above)
- Reading
Week 6: Referring
- 13 February
- Reading
- “Liturgical Libellus… ; known as the Prayerbook of Elizabeth of York: manuscript codex”
- Smith, Shang, Kim, Detzner, Barnet, Ashton, Arias, Aiello, Abbott, “MSS Codex 0877: The Prayerbook of Elizabeth of York,” 2014.
- Dominic Oldman, Martin Doerr and Stefan Gradmann, “Zen and the Art of Linked Data: New Strategies for a Semantic Web of Humanist Knowledge,” in A New Companion to Digital Humanities, 2016.
- More resources: http://linkeddata.org/guides-and-tutorials
- Reading
- 15 February
- Reading
- John Burrows, “Textual Analysis,” in A Companion to Digital Humanities, 2004.
- Stéfan Sinclair and Geoffrey Rockwell, “Text Analysis and Visualization: Making Meaning Count,” in A New Companion to Digital Humanities, 2016.
- “Text Analysis” in Tooling Up for Digital Humanities.
- Getting Started with Voyant Tools
- Using Voyant Tools for Basic Text Analysis
- Peruse the TAPOR site.
- Exercise 4 due
- Start Exercise 5 (see description above)
- Reading
Week 7: Sampling & Illustrating
- 20 February: Holiday – NO CLASS
- 22 February: Special Guest - Stace Maples on GIS/GEO-related topics
- Reading TBD - GIS-related
Week 8: More Sampling & Illustrating
- 27 February
- Reading
- Scott Weingart, Demystifying Networks, Parts I & II, in Journal of Digital Humanities, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2011.
- Martin Grandjean, Introduction to Network Visualization with GEPHI, 2013.
- “Data Visualization” in Tooling Up for Digital Humanities.
- Reading
- 1 March
- Reading
- Ted Underwood, Topic modeling made just simple enough
- Megan Brett, Topic Modeling: A Basic Introduction
- MALLET: MAchine Learning for LanguagE Toolkit
- Exercise 5 due
- Reading
Week 9: Representing & Deforming
- 6 March
- Reading
- Abby Smith, “What is Preservation and Why Does it Matter?” in A Companion to Digital Humanities, 2004.
- William Kilbride, “Saving the Bits: Digital Humanities Forever?” in A New Companion to Digital Humanities, 2016.
- Roy Rosenzweig, “Scarcity or Abundance? Preserving the Past in a Digital Era,” in American Historical Review 108, 2003.
- Visit from Nicholas Taylor, Stanford University Libraries: Web Archiving
- Reading
- 8 March
- Reading
- Johanna Drucker, “Graphical Approaches to the Digital Humanities,” in A New Companion to Digital Humanities, 2016.
- Reading
Week 10: Creating & Sharing
- 13 March
- Finalizing and publishing the exhibit
- 15 March
- Presentation of Final Projects in Class
Finals Week
- 22 March
- Final papers due
Course Policies
Office Hours and Communications
Face to face meetings are extremely important to me, and I am always happy to schedule an appointment to discuss course work and progress. I may offer drop-by hours as well, depending on the needs of the course.
E-mail is the easiest way of communicating with me blalbrit@stanford.edu. I will do my best to respond within 24 hours. All course communications will be sent to your Stanford e-mail address.
Assignments
Given the nature of this class, I reserve the right to change due dates or assignments in response to course needs. I will provide lots of notice of any changes, and those changes will be designed only to occur if they benefit student work. Satisfactory completion of all assignments is a requirement for this course.
Assignments will be penalized if submitted late – by one step per day (from A to A-, for example). If you anticipate a conflict with a due date, contact me as soon as possible.
Participation and Attendance
We will be working closely together in this class, and you are expected to be in attendance every day without exception. Should you have to be absent from a class session, please notify me well in advance by e-mail. All assignments must be turned in on time, even if you are absent.
Honor Code and Fundamental Standard
All students must observe the Honor Code and Fundamental Standard. For full details, please see the page provided by the Stanford Office of Community Standards here: https://communitystandards.stanford.edu/student-conduct-process/honor-code-and-fundamental-standard.
Students with Documented Disabilities
Students who may need an academic accommodation based on the impact of a disability must initiate the request with the Office of Accessible Education (OAE). Professional staff will evaluate the request with required documentation, recommend reasonable accommodations, and prepare an Accommodation Letter for faculty dated in the current quarter in which the request is being made. Students should contact the OAE as soon as possible since timely notice is needed to coordinate accommodations. The OAE is located at 563 Salvatierra Walk (phone: 723-1066, URL: http://studentaffairs.stanford.edu/oae).