TECHNOLOGY AND THE HUMANITIES
Eric Rabkin, esrabkin@umich.edu, Office: 3243 Angell Hall,
TWTh 3:10-4:00 & by appt; 764-2553
The broad objective of this course, designed for graduate students and upper-level undergraduate students in departments across the University, is to work with—and study the theoretical implications of—the tools and techniques used to create, gather, manipulate, analyze, and present electronic information both locally and via computer networks. We will pay special attention to the techniques available to facilitate scholarship, especially collaborative scholarship, in the humanities, and to the creation and publication of "compound documents" be they removable media or on network servers. In addition to each student’s pursuing work to generate an individual product, by the middle of the semester all students in the class will be working in groups of four or more to tackle a real project in the humanities and produce a fairly sophisticated and substantial multimedia product. Such projects might include, for example, a) the generation of an on-line resource, including historical material, video clips, class handouts, science lessons, and literary criticism in the support of the University's existing lecture/discussion course in science fiction; b) the publication of a poetry anthology, using typographical techniques and page design to get a desired effect in digitally published paper versions, and augmented for an on-line version with graphic and textual critical and background materials made available through hypertextual links; c) the assembly of a documentary resource annotating a series of films, complete with film clips to illustrate points; d) the creation of a literary research paper using digital texts alongside images of the originally published paper texts; and e) the design and construction of information products, for example, a 17th-century English culture database that can be searched on-line and/or explored on removable media or via a hypertext navigator such as Firefox, or, using similar techniques, a database exploring the uses of verbal and visual idioms across cultures. We can take advantage of the University’s capability of publishing these course projects as Web pages or disks. The range of possible projects will be restrained only by the time available, the imagination of the students, and the concurrence of the instructor.
The course calendar indicates specific tools and techniques to be discussed
and demonstrated, topics and readings to be discussed, and work to be presented.
As a group, we will also consider unscheduled subjects. Other tools, techniques, readings and topics will arise for individuals, for the whole group, and
for particular project groups. Some of us necessarily will know more than others
about one or more of these matters of technology or humanistic study. Working
with research technologies in the humanities may sometimes be exhilarating and
sometimes frustrating but always can be satisfying if those who can help do.
Thus, we will maintain what might be called an open seminar environment in which
we can all teach each other. Everyone will be expected to be fully responsible
to the work, the project group, and what will doubtless be a class of people
diverse in backgrounds and interests. These technologies can build communities;
our greatest achievements are possible only if we take advantage of the class as
a community and contribute to it accordingly.
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INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP WORK (Finished Projects: Fall 2007; Fall 2008; Selected Student Humanities InfoTech Coursework [group projects only])
Each student in the course will create an individual product and contribute to a group project.
The individual and the group project will each will begin with a printed proposal. These proposals should be discussed with the instructor and, if need be, revised. (Count on needing revision; start early!) When accepted, the hard copy proposal will be signed by the instructor. The signed proposals should be scanned into a pdf document to which are attached instructions for accessing the project. This pdf should be sent to the instructor as an email attachment by midnight of the day the project is due. For the individual products, proposals should include the proposer's name, the date, a statement of the topic, some materials likely to be relevant for background and/or analysis, and either a reason the student wants to study this topic or a tentative hypothesis about the topic. For group projects, proposals should include the names of the group members, the date, statement of the topic, what the group hopes to accomplish by pursuing the project, some materials likely to be relevant for background and/or analysis, additional resources the group may need (e.g., electronic reproduction rights, learning Adobe Premier, translating from Russian), and a tentative work plan indicating the distribution of responsibilities and schedule of activities.
Individual product: A critical study of the humanistic implications of some technology as broadly conceived, e.g., alphabetic phonography, papyrus, telegraphy, sound movies, hypertext, microwave ovens. All individual products should be done primarily as Flash movies although, where appropriate, those movies may link to online PowerPoint presentations, flat Web pages, video clips, and so on. This assignment challenges students to pursue an unusual chain of inquiry: come to a definition of a technology that allows you to understand its fundamental nature and affordances, conceive of its potential applications, and consider why some of its potential applications did not work out while others did and the humanistic implications of both those that didn’t and those that did. Of course one typically cannot do this in detail for every application of a given technology, but one can choose representative applications that allow discussion of the most important humanistic implications. Choosing which applications to study extensively and to discuss, both hypothetical and actual, is part of the rhetorical and argumentative task. This overall effort helps get students to recognize that technologies only seem transparent and inevitable and it helps stretch one's imagination about both technology and the humanities. That this assignment should be executed using at least Flash if not other computer-based technologies challenges students to use new technology even while working on the implications of some other once-new technology. The use of new presentational technology should make palpable that rhetorical choices, like so much else in our lives, are in part shaped by the technologies one uses. Each presentation should represent as much finished work, and be of the same scholarly rigor, as one would expect of a traditional, tightly reasoned, well supported, argumentative research paper of at least ten pages. Students should feel free to dovetail the work on their individual products with that on their group projects. Those who, in the light of later developments, wish to revise, may do so. If the first submission is judged serious and the revision judged substantial, the later grade will supplant the earlier. (More on the individual product)
Group projects can range widely, as discussed in the Overview section
earlier on this syllabus. The projects themselves have two parts: a) the group
product itself, and b) a group analysis discussing and/or demonstrating one
or more theoretical problems encountered in producing the product. The group
product should reflect in rigor and substance the committed, extended work of
a number of people. This product might be anything so long as it reflects a
serious and creative approach to a well-defined humanistic problem, uses appropriate
tools to address that problem, presents its results in compelling ways that
are appropriate to the problem and audience, and takes proper advantage of today’s
available presentational technologies. The group analysis should be equivalent
to a 5-10 page traditional paper in rigor and substance. Its length will depend
on the nature of the project group's experience. The nature and focus of the
group analysis may well vary from group to group, but the "theory" in "theoretical
problems" always should have to do with our continuing concern for the humanistic
implications of technology. What have your experiences been in pursuing the
group project? Could it be that your fundamental presentational design needed
major revision? If so, how did you come to notice that need? What assumptions
did you need to revise to make that revision properly? What solution did you
come up with? How did you come up with it? What did you, in general (that is,
theoretically) learn about presentational design? Or, could it be that you have
discovered that the very medium you have chosen enhances, inhibits, or distorts
your viewer/auditor's appreciation of the materials you want to treat? How did
you discover that? Why and/or how does it happen? What did you do to compensate
for or take advantage of that? Again, what did you learn in general from this
process? Or, could it be that the methods by which you worked in a group mediated
by certain technologies enhanced or inhibited collective progress? How? Again,
what did you learn from this? You are invited to talk with the instructor about
these group analyses. Although the analyses are to be objective, the objects
under analysis are supposed to be your collective experience in producing your
group product itself. The resulting group analysis is supposed to be something
as solid and informative as a traditional analytic essay. Indeed, it very well
may be a traditional analytic essay.
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The individual product contributes 25% toward the student's final grade. Each
student receives the grade of his or her project group on the group work. The
group project contributes 50% toward the student's final grade. (The relative
weight of the group product and the group analysis will depend on what each
project group encounters but is likely to be about 2/3 and 1/3 respectively.)
Participation in the course as a whole contributes 25%. (N.B.: Plagiarism—an
especially important issue when dealing with electronic reproduction—will
not be tolerated. If in doubt about what constitutes plagiarism, please see
the English Department
Plagiarism Policy Statement and/or consult the instructor. Even a single
instance of plagiarism may result in failure in the course.) The course will
not be graded on a curve; rather, each participant and product will be judged
against what it could ideally have been. If all work by all individuals and
groups are excellent examples of their kind, every student will earn and be
awarded an A.
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T 8 Sep |
Get-Acquainted Lab |
Th 10 Sep |
DISCUSS
Lynn White, Jr.'s "Technology Assessment from the Stance of a Medieval Historian" plus Clay Shirky's "Situated
Software"; Miguel Helft's "With Tools on Web, Amateurs Reshape Mapmaking"; and Nicholas Carr's "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" |
T 15 Sep |
"The Basics" (create and use access-controlled folders in IFS space) |
Th 17 Sept |
DISCUSS Library resources (e.g., MIRLYN, HTI, databases, etc.) |
T 22 Sep |
Begin seeking ideas for individual and group projects |
Th 24 Sep |
DISCUSS Ephemerality (e.g., Prelinger Archive, YouTube, fair use sampling, instability of the text, etc.) |
T 29 Sep |
Groups should be meeting with instructors about project proposals |
Th 1 Oct |
QE report due in class |
T 6 Oct |
DISCUSS PowerPoint con and PowerPoint pro (Wired, Sep 2003), PowerPoint cartoon 1 (The New Yorker, 9 Feb 2004, p. 60), PowerPoint cartoon 2 (Dilbert, 5 Oct 2008), and Gettysburg Address on PowerPoint (right-click to download) (and Gettysburg Address as student composition) |
Th 8 Oct |
Deadline for getting group project proposal signed |
T 13 Oct |
lIlustrations v. Visuals--The Fantastic and the Grammar of Graphic Narratives (multimedia lecture) |
Th 15 Oct |
Anne Eisenberg's "Lines and Bubbles and Bars, Oh My! New Ways to Sift Data" |
T 20 Oct | Study day - no lab |
Th 22 Oct |
Individual product due |
T 27 Oct |
DISCUSS Science Fiction: Hawthorne's "The Birthmark" and "The Artist of the Beautiful" in Mosses from an Old Manse; Sheckley's "Can You Feel Anything When I Do This?" |
Th 29 Oct |
Group work |
T 3 Nov |
DISCUSS The Design of Everyday Things: Norman |
Th 5 Nov |
DISCUSS Unintended Consequences: Dooling, Joy, and Gladwell |
T 10 Nov |
DISCUSS Persuasive Technology: Fogg; 7 Nov 2004 Captology presentation |
Th 12 Nov |
Deadline for optional revision of individual product |
T 17 Nov |
Present and critique individual products |
Th 19 Nov |
Group work: Usability testing |
T 24 Nov |
Group work |
Th 26 Nov | Thanksgiving |
T 1 Dec |
Group Presentation: |
Th 3 Dec |
Group Presentation: |
T 8 Dec |
Group Presentation: |
Th 10 Dec |
Summary session |
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
"The Basics"
Collaboration
tools
A Companion to Digital Humanities, ed. Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens, John Unsworth. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004
Databases, Introduction to
Dreamweaver, Introduction to
Excel: a sample gradesheet
list/database
Flash, Introduction to
Net Searching
Patent Searching
Photoshop Demo 1,
Introduction
Presentation options (download
files from ~lsarth/Public): Word, PowerPoint (II2PPT.ppt
plus Supplement 1 [babydance.avi], Supplement 2 [Beowulf.ppt]), Netscape/IE,
Flash
on the web and free-standing (FlashTest000823.exe), Director/Authorware,
FileMaker (Teach3.FP3)
Progressive authorship: Howl, Allen Ginsberg;
Yowl, Christopher
Buckley & Paul Slansky; Howl.com by Thomas
Scoville; Howl generator,
Chris Seidel
Step-by-step instructions for U-M systems and software commonly used at U-M:
Faculty Exploratory Tutorials and Handouts
ITCS (Information Technology Central Services; formerly ITD [Information Technology Division])
Knowledge Navigation Center
Storyboarding
Technology and Humanities survey of suggested readings, viewings, etc. (Feb 2005)
Tech Support Cheat Sheet
Text Analysis
Usability
Web design excellence: some examples
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This page was last updated on Monday, 07-Sep-2009 15:01:58 EDT .