Skip to content

Resources and information from the 2-part roundtable "How I Built This: DH Methods in 18th-century Scholarship" held at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies annual meeting in St. Louis, MO (2023).

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

atmcgrath/asecs-built-dh

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

10 Commits
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

About

"How I Built This: DH Methods in 18th-century Scholarship" was a roundtable session held at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies annual meeting in St. Louis, MO (2023). The panel was sponsored by the ASECS Digital Humanities Caucus.

Chair: Alice McGrath, Bryn Mawr College

Part I: Mattie Burkert, Jennifer Golightly, and Steve Newman

Thursday, March 9

Mattie BURKERT, University of Oregon, “‘You Are Literally Here’: Where Your DH Project Lives, and Why It Matters”

Steve NEWMAN, Temple University, “Building A Digital Edition of The Beggar’s Opera for Scholars, Students, and Performers: Lessons from Version 1.0

Jennifer GOLIGHTLY, Colorado College, “Qualitative Databases, Nodegoat, and Data Extraction: Designing, Implementing, and Iterating an 18th-century Data Mining Project”

Part II: Nicholas Paige, Beth Young, Scott Sanders

Saturday, March 11

Nicholas PAIGE, UC Berkeley, “The Virtues of Counting”

Beth R. YOUNG, University of Central Florida, “Using ElasticSearch, Applied Graph Theory, and the EEBO and ECCO Corpora to Identify the Sources of Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary Quotations”

Scott M. SANDERS, Dartmouth College, “Newspapers as an Untapped DH Resource”

About

Resources and information from the 2-part roundtable "How I Built This: DH Methods in 18th-century Scholarship" held at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies annual meeting in St. Louis, MO (2023).

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published