All Stories

  1. Pedagogy and public-funded research: an exploratory study of skills in digital humanities projects
  2. “Could My Dark Hands Break through the Dark Shadow?”: Gender, Jim Crow, and Librarianship during the Long Freedom Struggle, 1935–1955
  3. “Be Damned Pushy at Times”: The Committee on the Status of Women and Feminism in the Archival Profession, 1972–1998
  4. Project management as information management in interdisciplinary research: “Lots of different pieces working together”
  5. “Natural allies”
  6. Interdisciplinary scholarly collaboration in data-intensive, public-funded, international digital humanities project work
  7. “As Popular as Pin-Up Girls”: The Armed Services Editions, Masculinity, and Middlebrow Print Culture in the Mid-Twentieth-Century United States
  8. Harold T. Pinkett and the Lonely Crusade of African American Archivists in the Twentieth Century
  9. “A greatly unexplored area”: Digital curation and innovation in digital humanities
  10. Pinkett's Charges: Recruiting, Retaining, and Mentoring Archivists of Color in the Twenty-First Century
  11. The conceptual ecology of digital humanities
  12. The Conceptual Landscape of Digital Curation
  13. Archival Divides and Foreign Countries? Historians, Archivists, Information-Seeking, and Technology: Retrospect and Prospect
  14. How has your science data grown? Digital curation and the human factor: a critical literature review
  15. The Strange Career of Jim Crow Archives: Race, Space, and History in the Mid-Twentieth-Century American South
  16. "Curate Thyself" and the DigCCurr Experts' Meeting: Communication, Collaboration, and Strategy in Digital Curation Education
  17. CurateGear: Enabling the Curation of Digital Collections
  18. AERI 2012 Digital Curation Pre-Conference