DH-Collections-Connections
Recently Added Items
| Title | Added By | Updated On |
|---|---|---|
| Protocol: How Control Exists After Decentralization | kkeramidas | Dec 28, 2015 6:45:07 PM |
| The Decay of Twitter | kkeramidas | Dec 28, 2015 6:45:07 PM |
| Social Network Sites as Networked Publics: Affordances, Dynamics, and Implications | kkeramidas | Oct 30, 2015 7:41:02 PM |
| Planned Obsolescence | kkeramidas | Oct 30, 2015 7:37:18 PM |
| New Challenges for the Archiving of Digital Writing | kkeramidas | Oct 15, 2015 7:17:22 PM |
| The Humanities, Done Digitally | kkeramidas | Sep 15, 2015 6:53:01 PM |
| Planned Obsolescence | kkeramidas | Sep 15, 2015 6:48:56 PM |
| The Digital Humanities and the Transcending of Mortality | kkeramidas | Sep 15, 2015 6:45:01 PM |
| Demystifying Networks, Parts I & II | kkeramidas | Sep 15, 2015 6:25:21 PM |
| Big? Smart? Clean? Messy? Data in the Humanities | kkeramidas | Sep 15, 2015 6:25:21 PM |
See all 48 items for this group in the Group Library.
Two of the most important aspects of digital media are their capacity to allow for the organization of and creation of connections between data. Collecting and connecting technologies have enabled the development of complex information management and network creation systems, which are the foundations of everyday experience in the digital age. Because these systems play such a significant role in how we communicate with one another they are critical to understanding how new media can play a role in public discourse and scholarly conversations. This course will consider how different tools and platforms, such as WordPress, Omeka, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest, allow us to curate the things in our world and build networks within which to share our experiences. It will also consider how we can analyze these networks and collections to present intellectual arguments in new ways and tell more compelling stories.
- Owner: Kimon Keramidas
- Registered: 2015-09-14
- Type: Public
- Membership: Closed

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