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← Data Visualization: From Discovery Tools to Visual Arguments
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Content and Libraries, Archives, Museums: What can LAMs do for you?

Posted on October 10, 2012 by david.b.lowe.librarian

What research services can the Digital Humanist expect from libraries, archives, and museums?  Accessing existing scholarly content and making new digital forms available are well within the realm of expectations.  But what do LAMS already do, and what services would be even more useful?

Categories: Archives, Copyright, Libraries, Linked Data, Metadata, Museums, Open Access, Session Proposals |

About david.b.lowe.librarian

My hook into the humanities has been language learning, which turned into taking advantage of texts as insights into culture, politics, and other social aspects. I went from German in high school to Russian in college and grad school and I'm still amazed that the odd noises we make and weird scribbles we write or characters we type can be so powerful in so many ways. As you might guess from that last sentence, my favorite theoretical camp is 1920s Russian Formalism, especially Viktor Shklovskii and his concept of "making things strange" (остранение).
View all posts by david.b.lowe.librarian →
← Data Visualization: From Discovery Tools to Visual Arguments
Pandoc (and Jekyll, and LaTeX, oh my!) Hacking Session →
  • THATCamp 2012 in a Nutshell

    THATCamp New England is an unconference that brings together scholars working in digital humanities. The 2012 meeting will be held at Brown University. The main unconference will be held on Saturday, October 20, 2012. Workshops will be held the Friday before, October 19.
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