Introduction to Digital Humanities: A-StateMain MenuSyllabusOutline, Outcomes, PoliciesResourcesReadings , Tools, WebsitesAssignmentsRequirements, Prompts, DeadlinesScheduleWeekly OverviewAndrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5
Spatial Turn
12018-01-06T07:05:23-08:00Andrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5274711Jaimie Gunderson, Theory and Methods in the Study of Religion, UT Austin, December 9, 2014. https://sites.utexas.edu/religion-theory/bibliographical-resources/spatial-theory/overview/plain2018-01-06T07:05:23-08:00Andrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5
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1media/park-map.jpg2017-12-22T08:06:54-08:00Week 966Spatialization: Narrative Mapping and Spatial Analysisplain2018-03-06T22:00:11-08:00
Spatialization: Narrative Mapping and Spatial Analysis
Keeping these ideas about space as "dynamic, relational, and agentive" in mind, read and collaboratively annotate:
1. Jo Guldi, “Spatial Turn.” Spatial Humanities: A Project of the Institute for Enabling Geospatial Scholarship, at the website of the University of Virginia Scholar’s Lab. http://spatial.scholarslab.org/. Hypothes.is link.
2. Edward W. Soja, “The City and Spatial Justice” (justice spatiale spatial justice, Nanterre, France: https://www.jssj.org/, 2008). Hypothes.is link.
Drawing on this week's examples and readings, use data from our group Zotero library or shared Evernote notebook to make a map using StoryMap or the Map Widget in Scalar. For directions on how to embed a StoryMap into a Scalar page go here; for direction on how to use Scalar's Map Widget go here. If you would like to use new data related to our research, add the source(s) to one or both of our shared collections. Build or embed your map in a new page of our workbook titled "Student's Name + Spatial Analysis." Follow the instructions on the "Assignment" page of our workbook to make sure that it shows up in the contents of your "Portfolio" and the "Spatial Analysis" page.