Digital Humanities Initiative, Hamilton College

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Affiliation: 

The Digital Humanities Initiative (DHi) at Hamilton College is a collaboratory – digital parlance for a research and teaching collaboration – where new media and computing technologies are used to promote humanities-based teaching, research, and scholarship across the liberal arts. See our projects list at http://www.dhinitiative.org/projects/

DHi challenges the ways in which teachers and students interact, use, and create digital collections (archival holdings) through the design and implementation of new digital tools.

DHi creates opportunities for new interdisciplinary models and methods of collaboration between faculty and students. These activities support a fundamental shift in humanities research, leveraging the potential of technology to access and manipulate rich media collections in ways that increase collaborative scholarship (not only within Hamilton humanities but also, potentially, with other institutions around the world) and lead to the generation of new knowledge.

DHi promotes a fundamental shift in the humanities through new interdisciplinary models and methods of collaboration between faculty and student-scholars, as co-researchers and co-creators of new knowledge.

DHi supports innovative inter and multidisciplinary research while integrating that research with teaching at the undergraduate level and with programs designed for a larger public.

DHi sponsors a wide range of activities, including faculty development workshops, media literacy programs, scholarly conferences and symposia, undergraduate seminars, and a fellows program for Hamilton College students and faculty.

Collaboration

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Kinds of collaborators: 

Individual/small group
Faculty
Graduate students
Undergraduate students
Librarians
IT staff
Public

Help description: 

We seek collaborators from across academic disciplines and administrative units to partner with us on a variety of active research projects and grant proposals in development. We also seek Beta testers to give us feedback on collaborative scholarship tools we are using with collections in Fedora Commons. We are consulting with Discovery Garden on Islandora Modules that interface with Fedora and also with DuraCloud to mirror our Fedora collections in a cloud repository. Please contact us if you are interested in working with anyone of our faculty researchers on their projects and/or if you wish to work with us to develop and/or test functions of the infrastructure we are developing to support collaborative scholarship in these projects.

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