Introduction to Digital Humanities: A-StateMain MenuSyllabusOutline, Outcomes, PoliciesResourcesReadings , Tools, WebsitesAssignmentsRequirements, Prompts, DeadlinesScheduleWeekly OverviewAndrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5
TwitterDH
12017-12-19T14:09:59-08:00Andrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5274711Figure 1. Digital humanities network on Twitter: 2,500 users following each other. Martin Grandjean, “A Social Network Analysis of Twitter: Mapping the Digital Humanities Community,” ed. Aaron Mauro, Cogent Arts & Humanities 3, no. 1 (December 31, 2016): 1171458, https://doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2016.1171458.plain2017-12-19T14:09:59-08:00Andrea Davise50475e163fb87bc8bd10c6c0244468fd91e8da5
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1media/DH_Map.jpgmedia/DH_Map.jpg2017-12-06T05:30:21-08:00Week 496Constructing Digital Identities: A Personal Introductionplain2018-07-16T13:02:10-07:00
Constructing Digital Identities: A Personal Introduction
Performing Identity with Social Technologies
With the ubiquity of social technologies, we constantly make decisions about how to represent ourselves online. Drawing on the work of theorist Judith Butler, we can interpret these decisions as "performative acts" that add up to an "identity tenuously constituted in time." Using Butler's theory of gender identity as a model, think about how digital identities are construced as you read and collaboratively annotate:
1. Judith Butler, "Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory." Theatre Journal 40, no. 4 (1988): 519-31. Hypothes.is link.
2. Martin Lister et al., "New Media in Everyday Life" in New Media: A Critical Introduction, Second (London: Routledge, 2009), 237-307. Hypothes.is link.
3. Anne Burdick et al., "The Social Life of The Digital Humanities," in Digital_Humanities, Open Access (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2012), 73-98. Hypothes.is link.
Assignment Part I: Bio Analysis
Select four online bios of "successful" academics or professionals in your field. (If you would like to focus on digital humanists, check out the collaborators section of dhcommons.org, an online hub that matches digital humanities projects seeking assistance with scholars interested in project collaboration.) After you have made your selections, create a new page in our Scalar workbook titled "Student's Name + Bio Analysis." On the page embed and/or include links to your selections and discuss what they tell us about the academic or professional bio as a form. For a list of additional questions to consider, go here. Once you have completed your "Bio Analysis" page, follow the instructions on the "Assignment" page of the workbook to make sure that it shows up in the contents of your "Portfolio" and the "Bio Analysis" page.
Assignment Part II: Personal Bio
Using the insights you have gained from the readings and bio analysis exercise, construct an academic and/or professional bio for your "Portfolio" page of our Scalar workbook.