Over the past two years, with generous support from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Scholars’ Lab at the University of Virginia Library has hosted an Institute for Enabling Geospatial Scholarship. Today we're pleased to announce the launch of "Spatial Humanities," a community-driven resource for place-based digital scholarship:
http://spatial.scholarslab.org
This site responds to needs identified in conversation with our 21 Institute faculty members and 56 participants (humanities scholars, software developers, and map & GIS librarians). It includes:
* an evolving, crowd sourced catalog of research resources, projects, and organizations;
* a set of framing essays on the spatial turn across the disciplines by Dr. Jo Guldi of the Harvard Society of Fellows;
* GIS-related feeds from Q&A sites and other forms of social media;
* and a peer-reviewed, occasional publication for step-by-step tutorials in spatial tools and methods.
Please help us keep this resource current by contributing to it! You can:
* use Zotero to freely upload research citations, projects, and links to groups;
* contribute your own tutorials and help sheets in Step By Step format for peer review and formal publication;
* ask related questions and offer help on DH Answers or the GIS Stack Exchange;
* and post your commentary on the essays we have shared.
Learn more about our NEH Institute:
http://spatial.scholarslab.org/about
and about how you can contribute to the "Spatial Humanities" site:
http://spatial.scholarhslab.org/contribute
With thanks to the NEH, the staff of the Scholars? Lab, our Institute advisory board and faculty, and the scores of Institute participants and fellows who helped to define the project,
Source:
Bethany Nowviskie, MA Ed, Ph.D
Director, Digital Research & Scholarship, UVA Library
Associate Director, Scholarly Communication Institute
Vice President, Association for Computers & the Humanities
http://lib.virginia.edu/scholarslab
http://uvasci.org/
http://ach.org/
This blog is dedicated to Slavic Studies, East and Central European Studies and Central Asian Studies librarianship.
This personal blog was created by Liladhar R. Pendse (Slavic & Eastern European Studies Librarian at Princeton University, Princeton).
Keywords: Slavic Studies, Russian, Central and East European, Eurasian Studies, Academic Librarianship, Minorities of Russian Federation, Princeton University, My Alma mater UCLA, Russian Diaspora, Caucasus, and Central Asia.
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