Working Session on Blogging Archives from the Classroom to the Community

How can blogs best be incorporated into the college classroom and can they build a bridge with the broader online community?  Jane Carr and I have been considering this question while launching a new blog, Archive Notebook, where we share and write about our unused archival research in hopes of fostering productive discussion with other scholars. In the longer term, we aim to make this forum a pedagogic tool that will facilitate qualitative crowd-sourcing within and beyond the university, the institutional archive, and other traditional repositories. We are in the early stages of our own work on these topics and would love to share ideas about digital collecting, curating, and archiving as scholars and with students. We are currently using a Tumblr format but we welcome discussion of other tools and interfaces as well ideas on how to maximize engagement with formats like our own.

Topics might include:

  • Thinking critically about the “commons” online – how to share public resources and participate in a collaborative cultural sphere
  • Evaluating the efficacy of standard academic blogging practices within existing institutional frameworks
  • Probing the line between documentation and analysis in digital writing. How can we — and our students — become skilled at the art of description as well as critical evaluation
  • How we can build audiences and learn how to be better audiences online? What sorts of users tend to be rewarded within the digital commons?
  • How can we continue to explore the relationship between the visual and the verbal? What exercises might facilitate various forms of new media literacy?
  • How do we teach archive-related digital writing while remaining mindful of the distinction between material archives and born-digital data?

 

 

 

 

Categories: Archives, Blogging, Collaboration, Crowdsourcing, Digital Literacy, Mapping, Publishing, Research Methods, Session Proposals |

About cecilyswanson

PhD student in Cornell University's English Department, on a dissertation finishing fellowship this fall. My dissertation, "Talking Writing: Practicing Authorship in the Modernist Literary Salon," explores the process-oriented conception of literature advocated by modernist writers who ran or participated in literary salons. I am participating in NYU's Digital Commons Initiative (DCI) this year and teaching a class on research methods for the digital humanities at NYU's Gallatin school this spring.