PUBLIC AND DIGITAL HISTORY MOD.2
- Academic year
- 2024/2025 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- PUBLIC AND DIGITAL HISTORY MOD.2
- Course code
- FM0489 (AF:508200 AR:285008)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6 out of 12 of PUBLIC AND DIGITAL HISTORY
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- M-STO/04
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Course year
- 1
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
1. Identify and discuss the main techniques for decoding primary historical sources and encoding parsed information into machine-understandable systems.
2. Use information-gathering solutions and content management systems to visualise acquired information and simulate scenarios from a computational history perspective.
3. Generate interpretations and narratives around historical sources.
4. Develop a research practice and apply the acquired fundamental skills to a selected specimen.
5. Contribute to the learning environment by participating positively in-class discussions and presenting work clearly and cohesively.
Pre-requirements
Contents
• Reflections on training machine learning algorithms for the next generation of historians;
• Towards a computational approach to history: The relationship between analog and digital sources;
• Reloading the treasure of human experiences into the digital time machine.
2. Augmentation vs. Replacement - Notes for a Conscious Use of Digital Technologies Applied to History
• Computational approaches as tools to overcome cultural barriers in the historian's profession;
• Digital Preservation & Open Source;
• Intersections between Digital & Public approaches;
• Decolonizing Digital Humanities: A constructive critique of Digital History;
• Data, Metadata, Big Data: Navigating the new "sea" of sources and methods.
3. Use of Tools and Features
• Understanding and navigating the main tools available to the digital historian;
• Practical applications of the tools examined in class;
• About history: Digital storytelling and digital communication.
4. Student Projects
• Research Data Management, sustainability, and data preservation;
• Designing a Digital History project and selecting appropriate tools;
• Student presentations.
Referral texts
Books
Cohen, Daniel J., & Roy Rosenzweig (2006). Digital History: A Guide to Gathering, Preserving, and Presenting the Past on the Web. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. DOI: https://archive.org/details/digitalhistorygu0000cohe/page/n3/mode/2up
Salmi, Hannu (2020). What is Digital History?. New York: Wiley. https://www.wiley.com/en-us/What+is+Digital+History%3F-p-9781509537020
Blaney, Jonathan, Winters, Jane, Milligan, Sarah, & Steer Martin (2021). Doing digital history. A beginner's guide to working with text as data. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781526132680/
Optional for Italian students: Paci, Deborah (2019), La storia in digitale. Milan: Unicopli - ISBN 9788840020914
Articles
Class discussions will be based on articles reading. Papers will be shared on Moodle from time to time.
The lecturer provides the text/materials discussed in the classroom, with any supporting tools, during the course and makes them available on the Moodle platform. These texts/materials, collected in a list at the end of the course, are an integral part of the examination program.
Assessment methods
- Continuous assessment (participation in class discussion of assigned readings, presentation of class project, peer review of class projects)
- Final exam (oral)
Teaching methods
• In-class discussion of assigned readings.
• In-class research activities that are instrumental to individual or group projects.
• Lectures based on case studies.
• Class participation in the discussion and interaction with the instructor and peers will enable students to develop assessment criteria for their own and their peers' projects.