Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Accessible, timely, and practical." --Legacy
"Relevant not only to practitioners and theorists of digital humanities but also to students and scholars of 19th-century American literature. . . . Highly recommended." --Choice
"In this compelling collection of essays, Travis and DeSpain explore the many ways in which digital humanities scholarship is remaking the pedagogy of nineteenth-century American literature. Teaching with Digital Humanities highlights the virtues of estrangement--how we can better see books, manuscripts, and newspapers once they've been tagged, aggregated, or otherwise reconfigured. Both the material forms of texts and the contents they convey are ripe for fresh analysis in a digital environment. This book is an invaluable guide to teaching within a new horizon of possibility introduced by digital methods."--Kenneth M. Price, coeditor of The Walt Whitman Archive


Table of Contents
CoverTitle PageCopyrightContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Digital Humanities and the Nineteenth-Century American Literature ClassroomAdditional TagsPART ONE. MAKE1. Kaleidoscopic Pedagogy in the Classroom Laboratory2. The Trials and Errors of Building Prudence Person’s Scrapbook: An Annotated Digital Editio3. Nineteenth-Century Literary History in a Web 2.0 WorldPART TWO. READ4. Melville by Design5. Data Approaches to Emily Dickinson and Eliza R. Snow6. Reading Macro and Micro Trends in Nineteenth-Century Theater HistoryPART THREE. RECOVER7. What We’ve Learned (about Recovery) through the Just Teach One Project8. The Just Teach One: Early African American Print Project9. Teaching the Politics and Practice of Textual Recovery with DIY Critical EditionsPART FOUR. ARCHIVE10. Putting Students “In Whitman’s Hand”11. Making Digital Humanities Tools More Culturally Specific and More Culturally Sensitive12. Teaching Bioregionalism in a Digital AgePART FIVE. ACT13. DH and the American Literature Canon in Pedagogical Practice14. Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Archives of Injustice15. Merging Print and Digital Literacies in the African American Literature ClassroomAbout the ContributorsIndex

Teaching with Digital Humanities

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    A Paperback / softback by Jennifer Travis, Jessica DeSpain, Jessica DeSpain

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      Publisher: University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 15/11/2018
      ISBN13: 9780252083983, 978-0252083983
      ISBN10: 0252083989

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Accessible, timely, and practical." --Legacy
      "Relevant not only to practitioners and theorists of digital humanities but also to students and scholars of 19th-century American literature. . . . Highly recommended." --Choice
      "In this compelling collection of essays, Travis and DeSpain explore the many ways in which digital humanities scholarship is remaking the pedagogy of nineteenth-century American literature. Teaching with Digital Humanities highlights the virtues of estrangement--how we can better see books, manuscripts, and newspapers once they've been tagged, aggregated, or otherwise reconfigured. Both the material forms of texts and the contents they convey are ripe for fresh analysis in a digital environment. This book is an invaluable guide to teaching within a new horizon of possibility introduced by digital methods."--Kenneth M. Price, coeditor of The Walt Whitman Archive


      Table of Contents
      CoverTitle PageCopyrightContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Digital Humanities and the Nineteenth-Century American Literature ClassroomAdditional TagsPART ONE. MAKE1. Kaleidoscopic Pedagogy in the Classroom Laboratory2. The Trials and Errors of Building Prudence Person’s Scrapbook: An Annotated Digital Editio3. Nineteenth-Century Literary History in a Web 2.0 WorldPART TWO. READ4. Melville by Design5. Data Approaches to Emily Dickinson and Eliza R. Snow6. Reading Macro and Micro Trends in Nineteenth-Century Theater HistoryPART THREE. RECOVER7. What We’ve Learned (about Recovery) through the Just Teach One Project8. The Just Teach One: Early African American Print Project9. Teaching the Politics and Practice of Textual Recovery with DIY Critical EditionsPART FOUR. ARCHIVE10. Putting Students “In Whitman’s Hand”11. Making Digital Humanities Tools More Culturally Specific and More Culturally Sensitive12. Teaching Bioregionalism in a Digital AgePART FIVE. ACT13. DH and the American Literature Canon in Pedagogical Practice14. Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Archives of Injustice15. Merging Print and Digital Literacies in the African American Literature ClassroomAbout the ContributorsIndex

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