James Baker – This&THATCamp Sussex Humanities Lab http://this.thatcamp.org Just another THATCamp site Fri, 20 May 2016 16:29:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 TEACH – Open Source Personal Digital Archiving http://this.thatcamp.org/2016/02/15/session-proposal-open-source-personal-digital-archiving/ Mon, 15 Feb 2016 09:43:09 +0000 http://this.thatcamp.org/?p=151 Continue reading ]]>

SESSION REQUIREMENTS
If you intend to come to this session and want to do this work on your own laptop, please make sure you do the following in advance of coming to Sussex (it may be possible during but the files are a bit big!):

The paper archive has been replaced by physical data storage – a new format that requires historians, archivists, and humanists to think and act afresh. In just 35 years most people – in Britain and worldwide – have come to create text and data in a fundamentally new way. The first step towards working with these personal digital archives if to preserve them. You can’t just turn on an old computer and start browsing: the act of booting it up adds new data to the archive with fresh data stamps, thus compromising its authenticity. Thankfully open source digital forensic tools aimed at archivists and scholars have made huge strides in recent years thanks largely to the efforts of the BitCurator project led by University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.

Harddrive_platters

In this session, we’ll work together to capture some dummy media (bring your own if you want to work with the real thing!) and explore that media using BitCurator: a suite of open source digital forensics and data analysis tools design to help collecting institutions process born-digital materials.

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#thisthat Camp Sussex Humanities Lab, 19-20 May http://this.thatcamp.org/2012/09/27/hello-world/ Thu, 27 Sep 2012 20:59:40 +0000 http://this.thatcamp.org/?p=1 Continue reading ]]>

How do we locate the individual in the noise of data? How do we tell big stories that aren’t reductive? What tools and technologies can empower researchers, educators and learners in and outside the academe to grapple with the macroscope?


This&THATCamp Sussex Humanities Lab takes place on 19-20 May 2016 at the University of Sussex. It brings together humanists, technologists, educators, and learners to share, build, and make together around the theme of scale. Spread over two days to enable a fruitful balance of doing and talking, of teaching and demonstrating, of hacking and yacking, this delegate-led unconference throws open the Sussex Humanities Lab to stimulate novel collaborations that reinvent the humanities, one bit at a time.

The event will focus on hands-on sessions that explore methods, practice, and strategies for working with humanities data at scale, be that close up or at a distance; but in reality, anything that isn’t a standard talk goes! Sessions proposed thus far can be found at this.thatcamp.org/category/session-proposals/. As participants, you will pick on the first day when, where, and whether the sessions proposed take place.

In addition to the unconference elements, the event will feature a keynote from Melodee Beals (Loughborough) entitled ‘A Series of Small Things: The Case Study in the Age of Big Data’.

Those interested in joining us should register at this.thatcamp.org/register/. Please note that spaces are limited so registration is vital.

Bursaries are available for postgraduate, early-career, or unwaged individuals who need financial assistance to attend. Contact james.baker@sussex.ac.uk to discuss.

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