Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 38, No. 440. Department of Digital Humanities, University of Cologne Hosted by DH-Cologne www.dhhumanist.org Submit to: humanist@dhhumanist.org Date: 2025-04-04 10:17:10+00:00 From: Mcgann, Jerome (jjm2f) <jjm2f@virginia.edu> Subject: Re: [Humanist] 38.438: preparatory reading on digital text? When we at IATH some 30 years ago thought about posing a similar question, this is what we came up with: In the Oxford English Dictionary, how many times is [ X ] cited as an historical source for the definition of a word? Even in the period of AI, that still seems to me a question with rich and far- reaching implications. Jerry From: Humanist <humanist@dhhumanist.org> Date: Friday, April 4, 2025 at 3:32 AM To: Mcgann, Jerome (jjm2f) <jjm2f@virginia.edu> Subject: [Humanist] 38.438: preparatory reading on digital text? Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 38, No. 438. Department of Digital Humanities, University of Cologne Hosted by DH-Cologne www.dhhumanist.org<http://www.dhhumanist.org> Submit to: humanist@dhhumanist.org Date: 2025-04-03 10:17:27+00:00 From: WARWICK, CLAIRE <c.l.h.warwick@durham.ac.uk> Subject: Very introductory DH teaching Dear colleagues, I have what might seem a slightly strange question. What would you set as preparatory reading for a class of first year English students to introduce them to the question of what digital text is, and how it can be used differently from printed resources? I ask because we are starting a new compulsory first year module called Approaches to Literary Studies, which is intended to provide a bridge between learning at school and at university. Within this, I am teaching a session on the basics of digital text/hypertext and how it can best be used by students of literary studies. The module is very broad in scope, as an introduction to the English Studies and the methods and tools we use and DH is included in this. This is great, in the sense that DH is being presented to our new students as a core part of English Studies (later in the year they will get another introductory session on distant reading too). However, I’ve never taught anything at quite such an introductory level, so while I know of many excellent materials on text analysis/encoding/mining, most of them are aimed at graduate level or above. Also, these students may have very little background in maths or science (subjects which most UK arts undergraduates give up at age 16) and many of them are actively antagonistic to anything mathematical. So, anything too technical risks alienating them. But introductory reading is required for every session, and I am really not sure what to set them. Any suggestions would be most gratefully received. Best wishes, Claire -------- Claire Warwick MA, MPhil, PhD Professor of Digital Humanities Co-Director Durham Institute of Data Science Department of English Studies Durham University www.durham.ac.uk/staff/c-l-h-warwick/ _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe at: http://dhhumanist.org/Restricted List posts to: humanist@dhhumanist.org List info and archives at at: http://dhhumanist.org Listmember interface at: http://dhhumanist.org/Restricted/ Subscribe at: http://dhhumanist.org/membership_form.php